Kristen Hancher Accidentally Live Streams Sex With Boyfriend

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Kristen Hancher and her boyfriend Andrew Gregory (Just Dru) gave their fans the shock of their lives on Instagram. Over 14,000 unsuspecting fans tuned in to Kristen’s Instagram live stream expecting something totally different. Instead, fans were treated to raunchy bedroom audio that went on and on for three minutes. Kristen Hancher plants a kiss on her BF Andrew on Musical.ly. (Photo: Musical.ly) Kristen Hancher is Humiliated After Broadcasting Sex Live on Instagram Kristen’s fans were notified after she went live on Instagram. We won’t post the video, but it was all audio anyway, since the phone’s camera was pointed at the walls and ceiling. Here’s a GIF of the VERY shocked chat during the live! Fans heard sexy audio & were so confused in the comments! For three whole agonizing minutes, fans heard sexual noises and lots of moaning. Fans could only see darkness and occasionally, white sheets. In the background, Andrew and Kristen were heard making many slurpy kiss...

Moon landings





Moon landings

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One of the most notorious conspiracy theories is that the six Apollo moon landings, which took place between 1969 and 1972, were hoaxes, and that the photographs released by NASA documenting them were faked. This idea was first given substantial form by the former US Navy midshipman Bill Kaysing, who self-published a book outlining his theory, We Never Went to the Moon: America’s Thirty Billion Dollar Swindle, in 1976.

Those who believe in the moon-landing hoax argue that NASA’s motivation for hoodwinking the world was to create the impression that the Americans had won the space race against the Russians, when, in fact, they hadn’t. “Kaysing was a well-educated man, and he believed his theory and followed it through in a very analytical way,” MacDonald says. “When you read his concerns, they seem quite coherent, which is why people believe them.” Kaysing and his followers, many of whom continue to question the moon landings today, focus on supposed peculiarities of the NASA photographs, which are freely available on the agency’s website.

MacDonald explains: “There were several contentions: that the same backdrop appears in different locations, so that it feels like a set; that shadows from boulders and astronauts run in different directions; and that too many photographs were taken, given the equipment they had at the time.” Of course, MacDonald continues, every argument has been countered by NASA – but the enduring popularity of Kaysing’s argument is significant, because it suggests an underlying motivation for conspiracy theories in general: the mistrust of governments and those in power.

“It’s the same with UFO conspiracy theories,” MacDonald says. “Often, there is an idea that governments are hiding something: look at Area 51. There’s always an ‘us and them’ angle with conspiracy theories (otherwise who would be conspiring?) – and usually it’s governments who are the ‘them’

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Kristen Hancher Accidentally Live Streams Sex With Boyfriend