Day 64/100 Fake Animal Rescue Videos
Fake Animal Rescue Videos
Stormin’
- https://apnews.com/article/jim-beam-bourbon-distillery-shutdown-kentucky-a8303cd04005a9108ff43690faad421b?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email&utm_placement=newsletter&user_id=67443ead5ea714878c023bd3
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqhhbUr1aOs
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Jb3UHWCWFg
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MN_LkumE3Ig
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Leftover whey from making Greek yogurt is surprisingly useful—especially if you like simple, frugal, low-waste living, which fits your Phoenix72 / practicing-poverty mindset nicely. Below are practical, senior-friendly, mostly low-carb uses, with a few diabetic notes where relevant.


🥛 Food & Drink Uses (Easy & Useful)
1. Add to Coffee or Tea
You already touched on this—yes, it works.
- Adds creaminess and protein
- Slight tang (many people like it)
- Start with 1–2 tablespoons
- Best in dark roast coffee or chai
👉 Diabetic note: very low carb per tablespoon.
2. Smoothies (Even Low-Carb Ones)
Use whey instead of water or milk.
- Boosts protein
- Adds minerals (calcium, potassium)
- Works well with:
- berries
- cocoa powder
- cinnamon
- collagen powder
I no longer make smoothies.
3. Scrambled Eggs or Omelets
Replace part of the liquid with whey.
- Makes eggs fluffier
- Adds protein
- 1–2 tablespoons per 2 eggs is plenty
Fantastic added to omelets.
4. Soup & Stew Booster
Stir whey into:
- bone broth
- vegetable soups
- lentil or bean soups (if you eat them)
Add at the end, not boiling—heat gently to avoid curdling.
🥣 Baking & Fermentation (Old-School Wisdom)



5. Baking Liquid (Bread, Pancakes, Muffins)
Replace water or milk 1:1.
- Adds tenderness
- Mild sourdough-like flavor
- Excellent for:
- simple breads
- biscuits
- pancakes
6. Fermented Vegetables (Traditional Use)
Use whey as a starter culture.
- Sauerkraut
- Pickles
- Fermented carrots
Just 1–2 tablespoons per quart jar speeds fermentation.
🌱 Non-Food Uses (Surprisingly Good)
7. Garden Fertilizer (Diluted)
Whey is mineral-rich.
- Dilute 1:5 with water
- Pour at soil level, not leaves
- Great for tomatoes and leafy greens
8. Compost Accelerator
Adds moisture and beneficial bacteria.
- Pour small amounts into compost pile
- Helps speed decomposition
🐾 Pet & Animal Uses (If Applicable)
9. Dog Treat Add-In
- Mix a little whey into dog food
- Freeze into ice cubes in summer
⚠️ Avoid if pet is lactose-sensitive.
🧊 Storage Tips (Important)

- Fridge: up to 5–7 days (sealed jar)
- Freeze: ice cube trays = perfect portions
- Label it—whey looks like water!
Phoenix72 Bottom Line
Whey is old-world protein water—cheap, useful, and often thrown away for no good reason.
It fits perfectly with:
- living with less
- practicing resourcefulness
- rebuilding health without supplements
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- Claude Opus beats ChatGPT (to write). (the last one)
- How to (finally) make a Linkedin carousel with AI.
- GPT-5.2 is out. Is it better?
- AI detection is a scam.
- ChatGPT isn’t the best at everything.
- Stop typing. Start talking. (my favorite article)
- How to make infographics with AI.
- The split-brain theory. Why ChatGPT is generic.
- GPT-5.1-Pro for $25 instead of $200.
- Nano-Banana-Pro is out. My vibecheck.
- Context Is All You Need.
- ChatGPT-5.1 – what is new?
- The best free AI guides.
- Delve, and the many words to ban on ChatGPT.
- From Youtube to your own AI.
- Your ChatGPT prompt is too long.
- Remove em-dashes (and more).
- How to stop receiving the same ChatGPT answer.
- The new ChatGPT Atlas is live. Is it any good?
- Stop being polite. (⭐most popular)
- Learn anything with AI.
- How to search with AI. (hint: not with ChatGPT)
- The state of AI models for videos.
- This paper is a goldmine.
- How to vibe code an app (without coding)
- How to choose the best AI for images.
- How to restore an old picture & animate it. I did it with my grandma.
- The new nano-banana from Google.
- The 7 Deadly Sins of Prompting
- Start here with AI (really, start here)
- How AI is eating up consulting.
- How to create a business plan with ChatGPT.
- How to go from 0 to 10,000 followers on Linkedin, with AI
- The new ChatGPT-5 is out. Is it (really) better?
- How much should you spend on AI?
- How to set up your ChatGPT properly.
- 16 chatgpt myths.
- How to train your own ChatGPT.
- How to prompt ChatGPT with context engineering.
- How Formula 1 uses AI (& why it matters to you).
- How ChatGPT makes you dumb.
- How to not prompt.
- How to make AI battle for you.
- How Socrates prompts ChatGPT.
- How fast AI moves. (oldest)
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While there is no exact total count of all fake dog rescue videos online, investigations have uncovered thousands of staged clips across major social media platforms as of late 2024 and 2025
. These videos are a form of animal cruelty where animals are intentionally placed in life-threatening situations for financial gain through views and donations.
Scale of the Problem
- Investigated Totals: A 2024 report by the Social Media Animal Cruelty Coalition (SMACC) identified 1,022 unique links to fake animal rescue content across platforms like Facebook, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram in just a six-week period.
- Total Views: These specific 1,022 videos had been watched over 572 million times.
- Platform Distribution: Roughly 52% of this fake content was found on Meta-owned platforms (Facebook and Instagram), with YouTube and TikTok each hosting about 25%.
- Targeted Animals: While dogs and puppies are frequently featured, cats and primates are also common targets for these staged scenarios.
How to Spot Fake Rescue Videos
Fake rescues often follow a predictable pattern designed to manipulate viewer emotions. Watch for these red flags:
- The “Lucky” Discovery: The camera is already rolling when the “rescuer” happens to find an animal in a highly unusual, dramatic situation (e.g., a puppy being attacked by a large snake).
- Same Animals/Settings: The same dog or distinctive markings appear in multiple “unrelated” rescue videos on the same channel.
- Delayed Action: The “rescuer” prioritizes filming over immediately helping the animal, such as adjusting camera angles while the animal is in distress.
- Dramatic Production: Heavy use of emotional background music, slow-motion shots, and “before and after” thumbnails that look staged.
- Lack of Professionalism: Legitimate rescues typically mention veterinary care, follow-up updates, or the name of a registered nonprofit organization (e.g., Hope For Paws or Animal Aid Unlimited).
What You Should Do
If you suspect a video is fake:
- Do Not Interact: Avoid liking, commenting, or sharing, as this helps the video’s algorithm and increases the creator’s revenue.
- Report the Video: Use the platform’s reporting tool to flag the content for animal cruelty or harmful acts.
- Support Verifiable Groups: Check for legitimacy using databases like Petfinder or by verifying the organization’s nonprofit status.
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