• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 101 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_001.jpg
  • Feb. 03, 2009 - Couple on laptop, using credit card. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20090203_baf_cu5_004.jpg
  • Jan. 11, 2010 - Young man holding leaf in forest. Model Released (MR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100111_baf_cu5_066.jpg
  • Jul. 10, 2008 - Girl looking at bubbles. Model Released (MR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20080710_baf_cu5_063.jpg
  • Sep. 04, 2010 - Four business people using laptop. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100904_baf_cu5_118.jpg
  • Sep. 04, 2010 - Two men discussing mobile telephone. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100904_baf_cu5_110.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Dogs And Starfish On Beach, Tofino, Vancouver Island, Canada (Credit Image: © Deddeda/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_425.jpg
  • December 8, 2008 - Westwood, CA, U.S. - 08 December 2008 - Westwood, California - Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie and parents William Alvin Pitt and Jane Pitt. ''The Curious Case of Benjamin Button'' Los Angeles Premiere held at Mann's Village Theatre. Photo Credit: Michael Jade/AdMedia (Credit Image: © Michael Jade/AdMedia via ZUMA Wire)
    20081208_baa_a123_353.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_012.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_011.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt arrive for the premiere of the film, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at the Mann's Village theater, in Los Angeles.
    PA-6637136.jpg
  • File Photo: Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie at the Los Angeles premiere of his new movie "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at Mann Village Theatre, Westwood. December 8, 2008  Los Angeles, CA. Picture: Jaguar/AdMedia
    action_23128437.jpg
  • File Photo: Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie at the Los Angeles premiere of his new movie "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at Mann Village Theatre, Westwood. December 8, 2008  Los Angeles, CA. Picture: Jaguar/AdMedia
    action_23128437.jpg
  • October 14, 2014 - New York, New York, U.S. - BRAD PITT promotes 'Fury.' William Bradley Pitt (born December 18, 1963) is an American actor and producer. He has received multiple awards and nominations including an Academy Award as producer under his own company Plan B Entertainment. Movie List: Thelma & Louise (1991), A River Runs Through It (1992), Legends of the Fall (1994), Interview with the Vampire (1994), Seven and 12 Monkeys (both 1995), the latter earning him a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor and an Academy Award nomination. Cult film Fight Club (1999), Ocean's Eleven (2001), Ocean's Twelve (2004), Ocean's Thirteen (2007), Troy (2004), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), and World War Z (2013), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), Moneyball (2011). He produced The Departed (2006) and 12 Years a Slave (2013), both of which won the Academy Award for Best Picture, and also The Tree of Life, Moneyball, and The Big Short (2015). (Credit Image: © Armando Gallo/ZUMA Studio)
    20141014_zap_g203_011.jpg
  • October 14, 2014 - New York, New York, U.S. - BRAD PITT promotes 'Fury.' William Bradley Pitt (born December 18, 1963) is an American actor and producer. He has received multiple awards and nominations including an Academy Award as producer under his own company Plan B Entertainment. Movie List: Thelma & Louise (1991), A River Runs Through It (1992), Legends of the Fall (1994), Interview with the Vampire (1994), Seven and 12 Monkeys (both 1995), the latter earning him a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor and an Academy Award nomination. Cult film Fight Club (1999), Ocean's Eleven (2001), Ocean's Twelve (2004), Ocean's Thirteen (2007), Troy (2004), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), and World War Z (2013), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), Moneyball (2011). He produced The Departed (2006) and 12 Years a Slave (2013), both of which won the Academy Award for Best Picture, and also The Tree of Life, Moneyball, and The Big Short (2015). (Credit Image: © Armando Gallo/ZUMA Studio)
    20141014_zap_g203_006.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_010.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_006.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_003.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - SãO Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil - SAO PAULO SP, SP 14/06/2018 BRAZIL-SAO PAULO-WORLD CUP:Pedestrians and traffic pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil, onThrusday, June 14, 2018. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_002.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - Sao Paulo, Brazil - Shoppers pass on a street decorated in Brazilian flags ahead of the FIFA World Cup games in downtown Sao Paulo, Brazil. In a curious quirk of Brazil's electoral calendar, for the last 28 years Latin America's largest economy has gone to the polls shortly after the World Cup. In the football-obsessed country, politicians have long attempted to hijack the sport to burnish their image. (Credit Image: © Cris Faga via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zap_f126_013.jpg
  • May 23, 2009 - Seattle, Washington, U.S. - MARY KAY LETOURNEAU-FUALAAU, 47, happy and laughing as the curious mob her for a picture or two. Mary Kay and her husband Vili, 26, aka 'DJ HEADLINE' co-hosted 'Hot for Teacher Night' at Seattle's Fuel Sports Eats & Beats. The infamous teacher-student couple, the ex-elementary teacher and her former sixth-grade student are now married. Fuel owner, M. Morris, said 'She has served her sentence, she's married her former student, and it's OK for them to have some fun on a Saturday night and this is the third time Letourneau and Fualaau have hosted a 'Hot for Teacher' night at the nightclub.' (Credit Image: © Daren Fentiman/ZUMA Wire)
    20170530_sha_f22_798.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt arrive for the premiere of the film, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at the Mann's Village theater, in Los Angeles.
    PA-6637136.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt arrive for the premiere of the film, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at the Mann's Village theater, in Los Angeles.
    PA-6637136.jpg
  • File Photo: Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie at the Los Angeles premiere of his new movie "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" at Mann Village Theatre, Westwood. December 8, 2008  Los Angeles, CA. Picture: Jaguar/AdMedia
    action_23128437.jpg
  • May 23, 2009 - Seattle, Washington, U.S. - MARY KAY LETOURNEAU-FUALAAU, 47, happy and laughing as the curious mob her for a picture or two. Mary Kay and her husband Vili, 26, aka 'DJ HEADLINE' co-hosted 'Hot for Teacher Night' at Seattle's Fuel Sports Eats & Beats. The infamous teacher-student couple, the ex-elementary teacher and her former sixth-grade student are now married. Fuel owner, M. Morris, said 'She has served her sentence, she's married her former student, and it's OK for them to have some fun on a Saturday night and this is the third time Letourneau and Fualaau have hosted a 'Hot for Teacher' night at the nightclub.' (Credit Image: © Daren Fentiman/ZUMA Wire)
    20170530_sha_f22_798.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 22 Mar 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40407413.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 04 Aug 2018<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406075.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 23 Mar 2020<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406073.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 15 Dec 2018<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406079.jpg
  • October 5, 2018 - Hong Kong, CHINA - Chinese Banyan Tree ( Ficus Microcarpa ) is seen here firmly rooted on the rooftop of a very old building, its roots firmly gripping onto a wall. Strange trees that thrived on a building such as this can be seen in several spots in Hong Kong that attract curious citizens and tourists to pay a visit. Oct-5,2018 Hong Kong.ZUMA/Liau Chung-ren (Credit Image: © Liau Chung-ren/ZUMA Wire)
    20181005_zap_l137_003.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695595.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695592.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695588.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695587.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695581.jpg
  • May 5, 2017 - Vatican City State (Holy See) -  Italian soldiers and some curious people look at St. Peter's Square from the columns of the colonnade. (Credit Image: © Evandro Inetti via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170505_zaf_i15_001.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 31 Aug 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406071.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 30 Mar 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406070.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 24 Mar 2020<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406069.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 29 Nov 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406068.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 31 Aug 2018<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406078.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 01 Jan 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40407411.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 20 Dec 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40407408.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 16 Dec 2018<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406080.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 18 Feb 2020<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406067.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695618.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695590.jpg
  • Twenty kilos of semolina, thirty kilos of ricotta, twenty of sugar, six of candied oranges to make one of the typical Neapolitan cakes, for a total of 75 kilos of ingredients. A Guinness sfogliatella was made in Naples. The event took place in Piazza Garibaldi, a crossroads of tourists and curious. A large oven built for the occasion hosted the cooking of the largest sfogliatella in the world commissioned by Antonio Ferrieri, patron of Cuori di sfogliatella, who made the core business of his company of the most representative dessert of the city of Naples. 25/05/2018 - Naples, Italy
    36695584.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Maria, a 44-year-old housewife feels 'discriminated and forgotten by the country. I'm curious to know what people think about the other side of the wall. I'd like to know why they wanted to put us apart. I'd like them to come and see our livinge conditions. We are all alike' she said, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_012.jpg
  • June 6, 2017 - inconnu - A hammock that can be mounted on a car roof is set to make exploring a more comfortable experience. The US-designed TrailNest collapsible roof-top stand lets a hammock be used just about anywhere.The main reason is sometimes there are no trees – such as in desserts, grassy plains or snowfields.The stand gives adventurers somewhere to hitch their hammock and also provides an elevated view of the surrounding area.The stands attach to car roof bars and each stands holds up to 250 pounds in weight / just over 113 kilos.Inventor Chris Blackthorn said he got the idea after taking his hammock for a drive through the Mojave dessert.He explained it is renowned for beautiful desert vistas but not for an abundance of trees. He added:”Searching the desert, I finally found a withered trunk with just enough tenacity to suspend one end of my hammock while the other hung from my roof rack. “The view of the cloudless, starlit sky was beautiful, even if the location near my lone tree was otherwise less than ideal. “My peaceful solitude was not to last, however, as shortly after dozing off I was awakened by an inquisitive band of coyotes who were persistent enough to return repeatedly throughout the night.“Upon returning home I began to look at roof top tents, hoping to gain some separation above curious wildlife. “The idea of a tent on the warm summer nights didn’t sound much better than my sleeping platform, though.“I decided that some experiments were in order, and began the design and construction of the hammock stand.“I am finally ready to share with everyone the joy that my hammock stand has added to my overland journeys. “Pulling into camp each night, I finally feel an excitement that was previously lacking, and I can't wait to stretch out each night in a spacious hammock. “The rooftop vantage elevates me above my surroundings and I fall asleep to views that I will remember for decades
    20170606_zaf_v01_033.jpg
  • *VIDEO AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com*<br />
<br />
A cross-eyed rescue cat is using his unusual looks to raise thousands of dollars for charity. <br />
<br />
Belarus has been blighted with a ‘confused’ expression thanks to a condition called strabismus. <br />
<br />
He lives in San Francisco with owner Rachel Krall, who adopted him from a shelter after seeing him online. <br />
<br />
He was surrendered to San Francisco Animal Care & Control (SFACC) by his previous family, due to landlord issues <br />
<br />
Rachel explains: “He is a very active and extremely curious cat.  He loves to play with balls, twist ties, and almost any other small object he can get his paws on.  He seems highly intelligent and doesn’t let his wonky eyes slow him down.” <br />
<br />
“Dr Travis Strong partnered with us to share more about strabismus, which is the medical term for the eye condition he has. It just means that the muscles that hold his eyes in place may have an abnormal position or may be damaged, causing the gaze to be displaced.  This condition doesn’t cause pain and hasn’t impacted his day-to-day. <br />
<br />
“Since his adoption, we have raised and donated $1000’s to animal charities to help other animals in need through his online presence.  In 2019, we partnered with Friends of SFACC, Cat Town of Oakland, and Sonoma Community Animal Response Team.” <br />
<br />
Belarus merchandise:  http://www.belarusthecat.com/merchandise/<br />
<br />
Where: San Francisco, United States<br />
When: 17 Aug 2019<br />
Credit: my_boy_belarus/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**MANDATORY CREDIT: Rachel Krall/Cover Images. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission**
    40406072.jpg
  • RELEASE DATE: March 16, 2018 TITLE: Flower STUDIO: The Orchard DIRECTOR: Max Winkler PLOT: A sexually curious teen forms an unorthodox kinship with her mentally unstable stepbrother. STARRING: ZOEY DEUTCH as Erica. (Credit Image: © The Orchard/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20180316_sha_z03_309.jpg
  • RELEASE DATE: March 16, 2018 TITLE: Flower STUDIO: The Orchard DIRECTOR: Max Winkler PLOT: A sexually curious teen forms an unorthodox kinship with her mentally unstable stepbrother. STARRING: ZOEY DEUTCH as Erica. (Credit Image: © The Orchard/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20180316_sha_z03_308.jpg
  • Adriana Lima releases a photo on Instagram with the following caption: "\ud83e\udd84The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button\ud83d\udc96 MINA, @cristmac @zizajaricjaric Ivan's". Photo Credit: Instagram *** No USA Distribution *** For Editorial Use Only *** Not to be Published in Books or Photo Books ***  Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency’s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.
    rti20623638.jpg
  • File Photo: 08 December 2008 - Westwood, CA - Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" Los Angeles Premiere at Mann's Village Theatre. Photo Credit: Byron Purvis/AdMedia
    action_23128435.jpg
  • File Photo: 08 December 2008 - Westwood, CA - Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" Los Angeles Premiere at Mann's Village Theatre. Photo Credit: Byron Purvis/AdMedia
    action_23128435.jpg
  • File Photo: 08 December 2008 - Westwood, CA - Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" Los Angeles Premiere at Mann's Village Theatre. Photo Credit: Byron Purvis/AdMedia
    action_23128435.jpg
Next