Collection of Strange and Ugly Anatomy Tattoos From Around The World
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10 Most Craziest Plastic Surgeries to Look Like duplicate of Someone Else
1. The woman who had 51 cosmetic surgeries to look like Egyptian Queen Nevertity
2. The grandma who spent US 16,000 to look like essica Rabbit.
3. The mother who had surgery just to look like her daughter.
4. The twin sister who paid 6,000 pounds on surgery to look completely indentical.
5. The octuplet's mom who wanted to look like Angelina Jolie.
6. The woman who underwent plastic surgery to look like her husband's ex wife.
7. The female impersonator who spent $ 16.00 to look like Michael Jackson.
8. The woman who beat the world record for most plastic surgeries to become a real-life Barbie.
9. The dying woman who spent $ 50.000 on plastic surgery to look loke Demi Moore.
10. The security guard who spet $ 5.000 so he could like the DEVIL
2. The grandma who spent US 16,000 to look like essica Rabbit.
3. The mother who had surgery just to look like her daughter.
4. The twin sister who paid 6,000 pounds on surgery to look completely indentical.
5. The octuplet's mom who wanted to look like Angelina Jolie.
6. The woman who underwent plastic surgery to look like her husband's ex wife.
7. The female impersonator who spent $ 16.00 to look like Michael Jackson.
8. The woman who beat the world record for most plastic surgeries to become a real-life Barbie.
9. The dying woman who spent $ 50.000 on plastic surgery to look loke Demi Moore.
10. The security guard who spet $ 5.000 so he could like the DEVIL
Crazy Man Scared of heights just an inch-thick cord between him and a drop twice as high as Canary Wharf Tower
With just an inch-wide strip of material separating him from a drop twice the height of Canary Wharf, this is Austrian daredevil Heinz Zak practising the new craze of 'highlining' in the German Alps.
These never-before-seen pictures show danger man Zak tiptoeing along at the peak of Germany's highest mountain - the colossal 1,746m Zugspitze.
And if that isn't terrifying enough - he even completed a 10-metre section of the crossing without a safety line.
Highlining requires nerves even more steely than tight-roping because participants take their precarious steps along a loosely anchored strip instead of a rope made rigid through tension.
It means the highline will bounce and wobble as they shift their weight taking each measured step.
Heinz walked three knee-trembling sections at the Zugspitze in turn, covering a total of 70 metres.
'A highline had never been attempted before at the Zugspitze and I wanted to conquer it,' he said.
'It was difficult to complete all three stages as the area is very exposed to wind. This made the middle section with no safety line more challenging.
'We had to keep coming back over several days to weigh up if we could attempt each section.'
For the past eight years Heinz has toured the world looking for the perfect spots to practise his art.
Today he is regarded as a pioneer who led the sport's development and currently booming growth in Europe.
But defying anyone who thinks he's just another stuntman looking for the next rush, the daredevil, from the Austrian town of Scharnitz, oddly said it's all about finding peace and 'losing himself'.
'What I do is not about adrenaline,' he said. 'Walking a highline is my way. It's just what I do.'
To achieve his miracles at dizzying altitudes, Heinz puts all his faith in equipment that includes the one-inch polyester line.
'One problem is that when it is taut and taking my weight, the slightest snag on a rock could break the line," he says.
Super-fit Heinz stays in perfect shape but it's days of mental preparation he values the most.
Like a bobsleigh pilot who must know every twist and turn on his track to avoid death, Heinz runs through each attempt repeatedly in his mind before stepping out.
'When I attempt a walk at the edge of my limits I just have to think it through over and over before I I go up,' he said.
'You have to see yourself taking each step and reaching the end.'
These never-before-seen pictures show danger man Zak tiptoeing along at the peak of Germany's highest mountain - the colossal 1,746m Zugspitze.
And if that isn't terrifying enough - he even completed a 10-metre section of the crossing without a safety line.
Highlining requires nerves even more steely than tight-roping because participants take their precarious steps along a loosely anchored strip instead of a rope made rigid through tension.
It means the highline will bounce and wobble as they shift their weight taking each measured step.
Heinz walked three knee-trembling sections at the Zugspitze in turn, covering a total of 70 metres.
'A highline had never been attempted before at the Zugspitze and I wanted to conquer it,' he said.
'It was difficult to complete all three stages as the area is very exposed to wind. This made the middle section with no safety line more challenging.
'We had to keep coming back over several days to weigh up if we could attempt each section.'
For the past eight years Heinz has toured the world looking for the perfect spots to practise his art.
Today he is regarded as a pioneer who led the sport's development and currently booming growth in Europe.
But defying anyone who thinks he's just another stuntman looking for the next rush, the daredevil, from the Austrian town of Scharnitz, oddly said it's all about finding peace and 'losing himself'.
'What I do is not about adrenaline,' he said. 'Walking a highline is my way. It's just what I do.'
To achieve his miracles at dizzying altitudes, Heinz puts all his faith in equipment that includes the one-inch polyester line.
'One problem is that when it is taut and taking my weight, the slightest snag on a rock could break the line," he says.
Super-fit Heinz stays in perfect shape but it's days of mental preparation he values the most.
Like a bobsleigh pilot who must know every twist and turn on his track to avoid death, Heinz runs through each attempt repeatedly in his mind before stepping out.
'When I attempt a walk at the edge of my limits I just have to think it through over and over before I I go up,' he said.
'You have to see yourself taking each step and reaching the end.'
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