Rabbit, Colorado and Frankenstein
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A rapidly spreading virus is causing cottontail rabbits to grow black, tentacle-like growths out of their heads, prompting warnings to steer clear of the mutated animals.
Earlier this week, the internet collectively gasped and recoiled as photos went viral of rabbits in Fort Collins with features on their heads that resemble horns or tentacles. Join In The NoCo host Erin O'Toole in a Q&A with Kara Van Hoose,
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The Daily Galaxy on MSN‘Frankenstein’ Rabbits With Tentacles Spark Outbreak Fears—Experts Sound Alarm Over Virus Outbreak and Spread Beyond U.S.
Wildlife officials in Colorado have confirmed a troubling rise in cases of shope papillomavirus, a rare disease causing wild rabbits to grow tentacle-like growths from their heads and mouths. While the condition is not new to science,
The grotesque “Frankenstein”-esque rabbits — once just a Colorado curiosity — are now turning up in Minnesota and Nebraska, their furry faces sprouting grotesque horn- and tentacle-like growths straight out of a B-movie.
Rabbits with black, tentacle-like growths sprouting from their heads are sparking comparisons to infected creatures from The Last of Us.
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Virus in Colorado Creating 'Frankenstein' Rabbits with Eerie Tentacle-Like Growths on Their Faces
Rabbits with black, tentacle-like growths sprouting from their faces have been spotted in Colorado. Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) said a viral infection called the cottontail rabbit papillomavirus caused the black growths on the rabbits.
The Bride of Frankenstein gets a new 90th anniversary 4K steelbook from Universal Pictures. See the full details below.
The free-spirited iconoclast also plans to next shoot a movie "about immigration and about Romanians working abroad."
Elordi, Oscar Isaac, and Guillermo del Toro open up about their take on ‘Frankenstein,’ an operatic monster movie steeped in faith, fear, and fatherhood.
A hybrid insect called "Frankenstein ant” is advancing across the eastern United States; it can withstand extreme weather and poses a threat.
The "Frankenstein bunnies" have been making waves across social media in the U.S. Recently, one rabbit potentially carrying the virus was spotted in a Seattle neighborhood.