Ellen Berry

Ellen Berry

Share

06/07/2026

The dog’s owner issued an emotional plea.

06/07/2026

The terrified animals are beached before fishermen brutally slaughter them with knives on the shore.

06/07/2026

The Jackson estate still contributes towards his care 😮

06/06/2026

Organizers are racing for star power at the historic event 😬

06/05/2026

Authorities have confirmed the first US case of a flesh-eating screwworm in more than 60 years after the parasite was discovered in one state.
The insect's larvae are known for feeding on living tissue, and officials are now taking steps to prevent it from spreading further.
The pest was previously eradicated from the US decades ago, making the discovery a significant moment for animal health authorities.

06/05/2026

She lived with them for 14 months.

06/04/2026

She's had enough. 😬

06/03/2026

My son handed his umbrella to a pregnant stranger in the rain—the next morning, 47 umbrellas appeared on our lawn, each with a numbered box.
My 12-year-old son arrived home soaked to the bone last Tuesday.
No umbrella. No jacket. Just shivering on the porch with rain dripping off his hair.
"Eli, where's the umbrella?" I asked. The blue one. The one his dad bought him before cancer took him two years ago. The one he NEVER goes anywhere without.
He looked up at me with those big brown eyes and said, "There was a lady at the bus stop, Mom. She was pregnant. Crying. Her belly was really big, and she didn't have anything to cover her. So I gave it to her. I couldn't just leave her."
I wanted to be mad. That umbrella was the last thing his father ever gave him.
But how do you get mad at a child for being everything you tried to raise him to be?
I made him hot cocoa, put his wet clothes in the dryer, and told him his dad would be proud.
We went to bed.
The next morning, I shuffled to the front door in my robe to grab the newspaper, coffee in hand.
I opened the door.
And I dropped the mug.
It shattered on the porch. Hot coffee splashed across my bare feet, and I didn't even feel it.
Because our entire front lawn—every inch of grass, from the mailbox to the maple tree—was covered in OPEN UMBRELLAS.
Forty-seven of them. Planted in perfect rows. Every color you can imagine. And under each one sat a small white box with a number painted on it by hand. 1. 2. 3... all the way to 47.
Neighbors were already gathering on the sidewalk, phones out, filming.
My hands were shaking as I walked to Box #1 and knelt down in the wet grass.
I lifted the lid.
Its contents made me scream.
Eli ran up from behind, looked inside, and his face drained of color.
"Oh no, Mom" he whispered. "We need to call the police!"
Read full story below ⬇️⬇️⬇️

Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company in Cincinnati?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Website

Address


113 W Kemper Road
Cincinnati, OH
45246