Welp, this video, aptly called 'Bunnies can fly ... proof,' just about does it for us. We're hanging it up. Blow the whistle -- that's enough internet for one week. We're maybe going to go outside, see some leaves. Maybe we'll buy that journal we've been talking about...
You think you know your pet, but do you *know* your pet? Would you, for example, say your guinea pig is a Betty or a Veronica? What's your iguana's opinion on repealing the Glass-Steagall Act? Most importantly, DO YOU EVEN KNOW YOUR FERRET'S MYERS-BRIGGS PERSONALITY TYPE????!! Is your pet ... an INTROVERT?
Last year dog owners gained a venue on which to extract some revenge on their misbehaving pooches with the Dogshaming Tumblr.
Now, with the Bunny Shaming Facebook page, folks with pet rabbits have a place to turn when their furballs make trouble.
It's Easter time, which means bunnies are everywhere! Here at TheFW, we welcome our furry, hopping overlords (especially if they lay Cadbury eggs), and have decided to place them into some of our favorite TV shows and movies.
You may not be aware, but the Easter Bunny has been around for a long time. Easily one of the most recognizable symbols of the holiday, the loveable critter was first mentioned in an essay by German physician and botanist Georg Franck von Frankenau all the way back in 1682. Funny, we always figured he was just a Hallmark creation.
We've gotta admit-- animals know a heck of a lot more than us humans do when it comes to stuff like photobombing, football, and navigating iPads. Humans usually overcomplicate situations, but our fellow four-legged creatures tend to keep things smart and simple, which of course involves massive amount of adorableness. Today we're talking about animals hitching rides on their animal brethren.
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The newest popular meme on the internet is the cute, adorable, slightly scary, Murder Bunny. Reminiscent of the Killer Rabbit of Caerbannog from the comedy classic 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail,' this bunny is white and fluffy and out for blood.
Lions, dogs and rabbits are all in different spots on the food chain, which is why they don't normally make for a tight-knit trio of friends. But that's exactly what has happened at a zoo in Edinburgh, Scotland.
The Easter Bunny is once again hippity-hopping his way toward our brightly-colored baskets. And while we may never be able to find the logic in a rabbit that lays eggs, (?!?!) we CAN say with certainty that the adorable cotton tails in these videos are sweeter than a Cadbury Creme Egg...and far less likely to melt in your purse.
People carry around a lucky rabbit’s foot for luck... Duh! "Where did this peculiar habit come from?" is perhaps a better question.
The custom of toting around a rabbit’s foot for luck is practiced all over the world, but there are two main reasons why some of us choose to keep one in our pocket these days.
The cutthroat world of dog, cat, and horse shows are not for the faint of heart -- so how about a bunny show instead?
The new documentary 'Rabbit Fever' profiles six people who participate in such events, all striving to win top honors at the National American Rabbit Convention, a spectacle that features more than 25,000 bunnies (!!!) in what's reportedly the largest mass of rabbits in the world.
While letter openers -- and letters in general -- are become less and less important in this internet age, if we were the owners of this amazing letter opening rabbit we'd still be looking forward to the mailman's daily delivery.
When you think of steeplechase events, you probably think of horses. But a new trend may make you think again.
Swiss organizers just held the first-ever European Kanin Hop Championships, in which 50 rabbits competed on a course with several small jumps and vied to be the first to cross the finish line as hundreds of spectators looked on.