Popular Elsewhere
A look at the stories ranking highly on various news sites.
While the Telegraph's most popular article claims , a questionable solution to mortgage worries is offered by a popular Details magazine article.
These housing troubles could all been avoided if, like Daniel Suelo, you . Christopher Ketcham spent the night with "the man who lives on zero dollars". But Ketcham's description of Suelo's cave life seems less than desirable. "Mice scurry over his body in the cave, and kissing bugs sometimes suck the blood from under his fingernails while he sleeps" Ketcham says. Perhaps not for Burt Reynolds then.
While Suelo doesn't need any cash, model Andrej Pejic says in a popular New York Magazine article "I don't get out of bed for less than $50 a day." The . While his $50 remark may have been an attempt at a joke, the article does say that he started out as a "cut-rate deal" as he could model women's clothes without being given the full women's rate. So the killer question for a well-hit New York Magazine article is - when you model both women's and men's clothes what is the difference between the two? "With men's, his movements are simpler, he tries to be stronger," it says, "with women's, he can be more fluid and dramatic". So now you know.
Here's a job title for you: . That's what Russell Talmo is referred to as. A popular New York Times article explains what the role involves: giving pepper spray to people in Montana to protect them against the increasing numbers of grizzly bears. OK so he doesn't just do that. The piece describes Talmo as roaming "a huge swath of wild country along the front in a pickup truck loaded with bear tranquilizers, dart guns, snares, radio collars and heart rate and oxygen monitors, responding to calls about errant bears". Surely a more exciting job description than that is in order?
The story of a shark which killed a British man while on honeymoon in the Seychelles is in a lot of the most-read lists including that of the Sun and ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ News. But at the top of the Daily Mail's is a question: The piece says a 36-year-old French tourist also died after he was bitten by a shark while snorkelling at the same beach on 1 August. Despite the question in the headline, it doesn't answer it.