Kenya 🇰🇪
A Kenyan honey seller, recently made waves on the internet thanks to a marketing strategy as unique as it is hilarious:
He sells his honey with a photo of his face horribly swollen on the label.
The photo was taken just after he got stung by a bee while harvesting his honey.
He cleverly used this photo, bearing witness to his mishap, to prove the authenticitv of his product. His swollen face became irrefutable and amusing proof that his honey is entirely natural, unprocessed, and harvested directly from the hive through hard work.
This brilliant idea transformed a painfu experience into an incredibly effective and original marketing tool. His ingenuity demonstrates how transparency, combined with a great sense of humor, can create phenomenal buzz and instantly draw the world's attention to a smal business.
Forty years after its origin, Rally Racing returns as RR40 — carrying forward a legacy built on instinct, performance and unmistakable identity.
#OZRacing#RR40 #オーゼットホイール #ホイール
On April 3, 1965, Ennio Morricone recorded this masterpiece in Rome.
Sixty years ago.
The soundtrack of a lifetime.
For A Few Dollars More | Ennio Morricone | 1965.
⚠ MARTIN BRUNDLE delivers a BLUNT ultimatum to Max Verstappen.
👉 "Go or stop talking" about leaving F1 over the disliked 2026 regulations.
Verstappen had suggested using safety concerns to force changes.
Alarms have started ringing all over the places.
GPDA chairman Alexander Wurz says drivers are unhappy, fans are unhappy and the viewership has started tanking to levels never seen before.
It's incredible the pull from one man. Fix it or we destroy it. Simple!!!
Max Verstappen has confirmed he is weighing up whether to continue racing in Formula 1 beyond the end of the 2026 season, such is his lack of enjoyment with the latest cars. Full episode in the comments. #RACER
Gray wolves eating blueberries. Wolves are known to eat berries and other fruits, which can make up a large part of their diet during the growing season
A wave of orange dust swept over Greece's Crete island as strong winds carried sand and dust from the Saharan desert in Northern Africa across the Mediterranean
The skies over the Greek island of Crete took on Martian hues on Wednesday. The eerie spectacle was the result of strong winds blowing stifling dust across the Mediterranean from North Africa.