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Hudson New York, Central Park

Conveniently located within a 5-minute walk of Central Park and Columbus Circle metro station, this boutique hotel features an interior lobby garden with trees and ivy walls. Guests will enjoy a variety of dining outlets, concierge services and fitness center. A flat-screen cable TV and room serve options are provided in all rooms at this Morgans Original Hudson hotel. In-room spa services are available as well. Guests can relax with a game of pool, read in the library, or catch up with family and friends on business center computers. During the summer, the Sky Terrace provides rooftop views of the city and the Hudson River. Hudson Common features an extensive craft beer selection and specializes in classic American fare, such as hamburgers. Specialty cocktails are also available. The Hudson Morgans Original is located within a 20-minute walk to Times Square. The Museum of Modern Art is within a 15-minute walk from the hotel. Hell's Kitchen is a great choice for travelers interested in Entertainment, Sightseeing and Theater. In this area you can shop 'til you drop for popular brands like H&M. We speak your language!

Wild Eagle Attacks, Best Attacks Ever.

Video also shows the rare
view of a wild adult bald eagle flying into its nest with prey. It looks
like the prey is a rabbit. The prey in the eagle's talons can be seen.
It is very difficult to photograph a bald eagle arriving with prey. Both
adult white-headed parents are shown. The one with the prey lands in
the nest and the one perched in the tree, then also flies to the nest.
For a while both are in the nest and then one flies away. After this,
one screams loudly.

These are probably the parents of the young
eagles shown cavorting in the sky. This view was taken about a month
before the later one.













The video also likely shows an attack
because the prey rabbit/squirrel is probably alive in the eagle's talons
as it is flown in. The eagles are shown tearing it apart and killing it
in the nest.

The video also shows a bald eagle nest with
nestlings and two adult eagles at the same time, which is another
unusual view. Shows parents tear prey up for nestlings. Shows several
vocalizations and screams. One eagle watches as the other comes in and
lands.

A very brave oriole attacked the eagle that was perched
over the nest. Its flashy orange color showed up and its musical call
can be heard several times as can the eagles vocalization."

Leaping Lion Catches Antelope In Mid-Air Attack



A flying lion leaps from a ridge to catch a fleeing antelope in mid-air. The extraordinary take down happened after a pair of lionesses surprised two blesboks running in their direction. To escape, a frightened blesbok jumped several metres from the ridge - only to be intercepted mid-flight by the hungry lion. As one of the blesboks makes a lucky getaway the other is swiftly dispatched by the fearsome predators.

Tiger Attacks Man: Real Tiger Attack Stunt

MEET the only man in the world who can withstand a full-scale assault by a 400lb tiger. Fearless Randy Miller, 45, has trained big cat Eden to leap 15 feet and pile-drive him into the ground in an inch-perfect fake tiger attack. It then looks like Randy's days are numbered as the huge predator then mauls him on the floor. But it's all part of the duo's purr-fect act - as Randy walks away unharmed. Dad-of-two Randy rears his star animals from birth and uses his lifelong bond with them to achieve wild things on the big screen. He bottle fed Eden when she was a cub, and eventually taught her to jump on him for food rewards. Randy's predator stunts are so astonishing they landed him a top stunt award for his work on Russell Crowe blockbuster Gladiator after - they superimposed Crowe's face onto Randy for a famous scene when main character Maximus was attacked by one of Miller's tigers, Tara, in a Colosseum battle. At his special animal training facility in Big Bear, California, Randy has trained amazing creatures for roles in Transformers 2, The Last Samurai and many other movies.

Man Addicted To Eating Bricks, Mud and Gravel

AN Indian man says he is addicted to eating bricks, gravel and mud. Pakkirappa Hunagundi, 30, first developed a taste for the non-edible objects when he was 10. Ever since he says he has consumed up to three kilos of debris a day found lying in his village in Karnataka, India. But despite his strange eating disorder - thought to be caused by a condition called Pica - he insists he hasn't suffered any ill-effects.

Videographer / Director: Dominic Rodrigous
Producer: James Tegerdine
Editor: Joshua Douglas / Ian Phillips