Tag Archives: python

‘Monty Python’ star Eric Idle, 80, has to ‘work for’ his living: ‘Not easy at this age’ – Fox News

  1. ‘Monty Python’ star Eric Idle, 80, has to ‘work for’ his living: ‘Not easy at this age’ Fox News
  2. John Cleese Responds To Eric Idle Slam: “We Always Loathed And Despised Each Other” Deadline
  3. Monty Python’s Eric Idle says he’s still working at 80 for financial reasons: “Not easy at this age” CBS News
  4. Why Monty Python have ALWAYS been at war over money: For years, they have hurled vicious insults at each other about daughters, wives in never-ending financial feuding. Now Eric Idle, once a millionaire, claims he is penniless… Daily Mail
  5. Eric Idle: Monty Python star working at 80 for financial reasons BBC.com

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Is Eric Idle Broke? 5 Revelations Made by the Monty Python Co-Founder on X – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Is Eric Idle Broke? 5 Revelations Made by the Monty Python Co-Founder on X Hollywood Reporter
  2. Eric Idle says he’s working at 80 for financial reasons: “Not easy” Yahoo Finance
  3. Monty Python star John Cleese defends ‘hard-working and pleasant’ Holly Gilliam after co-star Eric Idle ‘blame Daily Mail
  4. Eric Idle Rampage: Monty Python Star Takes Shots At John Cleese, Terry Gilliam & Netflix In Twitter Rant Deadline
  5. John Cleese Defends Monty Python Manager After Eric Idle Called Group’s Income Disastrous: ‘We Always Loathed and Despised Each Other’ Variety

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John Cleese Defends Monty Python Manager After Eric Idle Called Group’s Income Disastrous: ‘We Always Loathed and Despised Each Other’ – Variety

  1. John Cleese Defends Monty Python Manager After Eric Idle Called Group’s Income Disastrous: ‘We Always Loathed and Despised Each Other’ Variety
  2. Monty Python’s Eric Idle says he’s still working at 80 for financial reasons: “Not easy at this age” CBS News
  3. Is Eric Idle Broke? 5 Revelations Made by the Monty Python Co-Founder on X Hollywood Reporter
  4. Eric Idle Takes Shots at Monty Python Co-Stars as He Reveals Financial Woes The Daily Beast
  5. John Cleese Responds To Eric Idle Slam: “We Always Loathed And Despised Each Other” Deadline

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‘Monty Python’ Star John Cleese Says ‘Life Of Brian’ Scene Won’t Be Cut Despite Modern Sensitivites – Deadline

  1. ‘Monty Python’ Star John Cleese Says ‘Life Of Brian’ Scene Won’t Be Cut Despite Modern Sensitivites Deadline
  2. John Cleese Debunks Idea of Removing “Insensitive” Scene From Monty Python’s Life of Brian Stage Show MovieWeb
  3. John Cleese says stage production of Life of Brian won’t cut iconic scene due to modern sensitivities LADbible
  4. ‘Monty Python’ star John Cleese has ‘no intention’ of cutting controversial ‘Life of Brian’ scene New York Post
  5. No Laughing Matter: John Cleese Holds Line Against Calls to Cancel Scene in Life of Brian Jonathan Turley

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Python snake swallows and kills woman in Indonesia

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When Jahrah, 54, left her home for work as a tree tapper on an Indonesian rubber plantation on Sunday morning, it was the last time her family would see her alive. When Jahrah failed to return home that afternoon, her husband sounded the alarm and went out to find her.

The first sign that something was wrong was his discovery of his missing wife’s sandals, jacket, headscarf and knife on the forest floor.

The second sign was a heavily bloated snake, encountered by a search party looking for Jahrah the following morning.

“During the search the team found a giant python, measuring 7 meters [22 feet] in length, which we suspected had preyed on the victim,” the local police later said in a statement, which had referred to the victim simply as “Jahrah,” in line with the Indonesian custom of going by just one name. “The team captured the snake.”

The search team killed the reptile and sliced open its stomach, where they discovered Jahrah’s remains completely intact.

“The victim’s body was not destroyed when we found her inside the snake, meaning that she had only been recently swallowed whole,” the police said, after they found the reptile near the village of Betara in Indonesia’s Jambi province, located on Sumatra island.

Nonvenomous pythons usually prefer to not attack humans, choosing instead to feed on smaller animals — which they secure with a nonvenomous bite before suffocating to death through constriction and then eat.

But occasionally, humans are known to become their prey, too.

Snake conservationist Nathan Rusli, director of the Indonesia Herpetofauna Foundation, suspects a reticulated python was likely responsible. The species is the only reptile living in the Sumatran province of Jambi that is large enough to have consumed an adult human, he told The Washington Post.

“They are constrictors, so what they do is coil their body around you. They will give you a hug of death. You breathe in and your body gets smaller, it tightens its grip, and you can’t breathe out,” Rusli explained. “The top and bottom jaw of a snake is connected by ligaments, it’s quite flexible. They can swallow prey larger than the size of their head.”

Confirmed reports like these are relatively rare, occurring around once a year.

“Most cases are cases of farmers working in rubber and cacao plantations in Sumatra and Sulawesi, most cases occurs at night,” Indonesian snake expert Djoko Iskandar, a professor at Bandung Institute of Technology, told The Post. Only extremely long reptiles are able to successfully hunt adult humans, with the smallest Indonesian python known to have been involved in a fatal encounter still measuring over 18 feet long, Iskandar said.

Eek, a snake! Humans may be hard-wired to spot serpents — and fast.

Encounters between pythons and humans are becoming more common in Indonesia as people encroach on their habitats, which have come increasingly under threat, snake experts say.

In 2017, a 25-year-old villager on the island of Sulawesi was discovered inside a 23-foot-long python, suspected of killing him. The following year, this time on Muna island, a 54-year-old woman checking on her corn crops was swallowed whole in an area of the country known for its population of reticulated pythons.

Deforestation, which deprives snakes of their natural environment and food sources, is cited by experts as one factor behind the increasing frequency of fatal encounters between the reptiles and humans. Since 2000, Indonesia has lost 18 percent of its total tree cover, primarily as a result of deforestation, according to recent data from Global Forest Watch.

“If you destroy forest, the natural habitat of these animals, where are they going to go?” Rusli asked. “Especially if an area is fragmented, they’ll need to cross human settlements to get to another part of the forest.”

Additionally, trash, rats, and domestic animals associated with human life are easy prizes for snakes looking to feed, another attraction posed by the towns and villages increasingly encroaching upon their habitat. The pythons are also more likely to be hungry as a result of more competition from humans for the same food prey.

“It would be good not to demonize the snake too much,” Rusli suggested.

Dera Menra Sijabat in Bali contributed reporting.

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A 10-foot python surprised a woman in a supermarket spice aisle. She was a trained snake catcher.

Helaina Alati was browsing the spice aisle of an Australian supermarket when she came face-to-face with a huge snake. The head of the 10-foot-long non-venomous diamond python emerged through a space in a shelf above the spice jars in the Sydney store.

In this image made from video provided by Helaina Alati, a snake protrudes from a grocery store spices shelf, Aug. 16 2021, in Sydney, Australia. 

AP


“I was in the spice aisle just looking for something to put on my chicken that night so I didn’t initially see it because it was curled up way back behind the little jars of spices,” Alati said Wednesday. “I kind of turned to my right and it poked its head out.”

Alati — who, coincidently is a trained snake catcher — said the snake’s head came to within 8 inches of her own.

“Thankfully, I have a background in snakes so I was pretty calm about it. It definitely shocked me a little bit because I wasn’t expecting it,” she said.

Supermarket chain Woolworths confirmed in a statement that a “slippery and rare customer was spotted in the spice aisle” on Monday morning at its store in the suburb of Glenorie on Sydney’s northwest outskirts.

“Once it was sighted, our team members reacted quickly and calmly to cordon off the area for the safety of customers,” the statement said.

Alati said she used her phone to video the snake as it extended its body from the shelf into the aisle before reporting the intruder to supermarket staff.

“I said: ‘I’ll go get my snake bag.’ I think they thought I was a bit crazy to be honest. I don’t think they knew what to say when I said, ‘There’s a 10-foot python in your aisle,'” Alati said.

She retrieved the snake-catching bag from her nearby home and caught the snake, which had by then retreated back into the shelf. She then released it into nearby woodlands.

It’s unclear how or when the snake entered the supermarket.

“Only in Australia!” Hilary Leigh wrote in a Facebook post while sharing a video of the snake. “Lucky there was a lovely person who was very familiar with this type of species and safely looked after the good looking culprit.” 

Alati, who was trained to catch venomous snakes when she was a volunteer working for a Sydney wildlife rescue organization several years ago, suspected the snake was a male looking for a mate.

“I knew straight away it was non-venomous, it was non-aggressive, it wasn’t going to be a problem for anyone,” Alati said.

“If anything, I think everyone was a little bit excited. We’re all in lockdown so it was kind of like the most excitement we’ve had for a while,” she said.

According to the Australia Zoo, diamond pythons are black in color with cream or yellow, diamond-shaped blotches covering the entire length of their body.

“They constrict their prey in order to kill it and then consume it whole,” the zoo said.

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