No Bad News

In today’s world, there seems to be more bad news than good news. The truth is, there’s just as much good news out there; the media just isn’t reporting it. If you’re tired of being fed only bad news by the media, you’ve come to the right place. Here you’ll find lighthearted news: inspirational, funny, uplifting and interesting.

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Stunning Crocheted Christmas Tree Helped Knit Together a Community of Extraordinary Women



An incredible Christmas tree was designed and manufactured by a group of creative women in India’s state of Goa. They were inspired by the belief that the world didn’t need another plastic Christmas tree. Made entirely of crocheted yarn, the community tree was designed to help revive a fading craft. It features the women’s labor and offers a sustainable alternative to plastic-heavy festive décor. Located inside the Museum of Goa, the tree features more than a thousand individually crocheted squares made by 25 talented women of the Crochet Collective, an inter-generational, inter-continental collaboration that wields this introduced form of craft to help knit a community together. 
 

 
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Baltimore Cyclist Finds Joy In Collecting Lost Hubcaps and Stringing Them Into Art



Cyclist Barnaby Wickham has collected more than 700 lost hubcaps, mostly on bike rides around Baltimore. They have inspired a quest to turn litter into art, including Christmas wreaths, a giant fish and a large head of Snoopy. It's a hobby that developed nearly two years ago from his love of cycling and the joy of making something out of the junk he has collected. The 54-year-old says he can’t quite explain it, but one day while cycling in early 2024 he decided to bring home a lost hubcap. Since then, he has started stringing hubcaps he comes across to his backpack. “I keep track of them, and I have a Google map,” he said. “I pin locations where I find each of them.” Others in his community who have taken an interest in his projects let him know when they see hubcaps by the road. Now, Wickham keeps a list of them that he refers to as “hubcaps in the wild.” He wants to do the collecting himself because that's part of the joy of collecting. Wickham also gets a hand from his wife, Kate, who helps hold materials during construction and offers opinions. Wickham, who works in marketing for a defense technology company, stores his finds in his garage and works in his front yard. He uses expanded metal as a framework, with sheet metal with holes and wiring to hold the sheets in place. He uses zip ties to link the hubcaps on the sheet metal. His works aren’t small either. The head of Snoopy is 16 feet tall and about 21 feet wide. Last year, he donated two Christmas wreaths he made to the city and to a nonprofit organization. Wickham says his hobby is quite the conversation starter. “It’s just something people love to talk about,” he said.
 


 
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Holiday Ornaments Decorate Life All Year Long in This Belgian Shop



Getting ready for the holiday season has never been stressful for Christel Dauwe — after all, her holiday period lasts all year long in her Christmas ornament shop in the Belgian city of Antwerp. Her collecting began in her teenage years, and she now has more than 64,000 ornaments in her personal collection and another 18,000 displayed in her shop, The Christel Dauwe Collection. “My personal wish is to have a Christmas museum, where ornaments and the idea of Christmas can be on permanent display,” said Dauwe. Until that day comes, her small shop uses every corner to display its vast inventory. Its wares include birds of every feather, fruit arrangements, cars, angels, snowmen and other figurines, ranging from a few euros for a wood laser-cut Cathedral of Antwerp to more than 500 euros ($580) for a special ornament of Alexander the Great on horseback. The store began 35 years ago as an antiques shop, selling a few ornaments on the side, but Dauwe wanted to try selling more. Dauwe has been asked to provide ornaments for weddings and other events as well. As far as having Christmas all year round, Dauwe says she is never bored with it. Twice a year she goes around the shop and dusts each ornament individually. She has met people from all over the world, and entertains die-hard locals who stop into the store just for a morning chat. “There are two ways to go with Christmas. It’s either the nostalgia of the past or the hope for the future,″ she said. ″Hope is what is the most important to me. It’s what keeps you going.”
 

 
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Australian Politician’s Dogs Let Horse and Steer Into the House



A politician in Australia was left in "udder" disbelief when, after going out for dinner, he checked his pet-cam feed, only to discover that his dogs had let a steer and a horse into his living room. Andrew Mackay posted the incriminating evidence — with comedy theme music added — from his security camera on his Facebook page, noting that life at his rural home may never be the same. "Thankfully all of the pets were fine, but now the outside animals know what air conditioning feels like and will no doubt try again," Mackay said. 
 

 
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