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DUKAS_20640423_ZUM
18th Duchess of Alba Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart 1926 -
Sep. 13, 1956 - Madrid, Spain - CAYETANA FITZ-JAMES STUART, the 18th DUCHESS OF ALBA is the current head of the House of Alba and third woman to carry the title in her own right. PICTURED: The Duchess with her three sons and their dogs outside the Liria Palace in Madrid. (Credit Image: © KEYSTONE Pictures USA/ZUMAPRESS.com)
DUKAS/ZUMA -
DUKAS_189074154_ZUM
Chile Independence Day Parade 2025
September 19, 2025, Santiago, Metropolitana, Chile: The Chilean Army march with rescue dogs during the military parade marking Independence Day and Army Day in Santiago, Chile. (Credit Image: © Matias Basualdo/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. -
DUKAS_188781319_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
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Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston helping with the Rescue Dog Rescue slot to find homes for rescue pups on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
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DUKAS_188781318_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
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11/09/2025
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Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston helping with the Rescue Dog Rescue slot to find homes for rescue pups on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781317_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston helping with the Rescue Dog Rescue slot to find homes for rescue pups on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781316_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston and Stephen Colbert read a skit sketch based on her TV comedy drama The Morning Show
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781313_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston and Stephen Colbert read a skit sketch based on her TV comedy drama The Morning Show
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781312_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston and Stephen Colbert read a skit sketch based on her TV comedy drama The Morning Show
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781309_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston and Stephen Colbert read a skit sketch based on her TV comedy drama The Morning Show
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781308_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781307_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781306_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781305_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781304_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781303_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781302_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston shows off her children's cookbook named after her dog Clyde on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781301_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston shows off her children's cookbook named after her dog Clyde on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781300_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781299_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston helping with the Rescue Dog Rescue slot to find homes for rescue pups on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781298_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781297_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781296_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781295_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781294_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781293_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston shows off a photo of her two dogs, Lord Chesterfield, (left) a Labrador and Clyde (right) a Schnauzer mix.
on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781292_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston shows off a photo of her two dogs, Lord Chesterfield, (left) a Labrador and Clyde (right) a Schnauzer mix.
on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781291_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Aniston shows off a photo of her two dogs, Lord Chesterfield, (left) a Labrador and Clyde (right) a Schnauzer mix.
on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781290_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_188781289_FER
Aniston shows puppy love
Ferrari Press Agency
Aniston 1
Ref 17142
11/09/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: CBS
Friends star Jennifer Aniston went on TV to help find homes for rescue pups.
She revealed she has always owned rescue dogs herself and the first she ever adopted was an extra on the Friends set.
His name was Norman and she has a tattoo on her foot in his memory.
Jennifer, 56, also showed off a cook book for kids named after one of her two current dogs, named Clyde, which has recipes children can make with their parents.
Aniston appeared on the Stephen Colbert talk show in the US to promote the latest series of her AppleTV+ comedy drama The Morning Show.
She said first dog Norman wasn’t the most cooperative co-star when he made a guest appearance on the iconic sitcom, which led to him going home with her.
OPS: Anistonon the Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUK10163056_003
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_004
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_008
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_005
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_011
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_012
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_013
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_016
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_015
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_014
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_006
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_007
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_002
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_001
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_010
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163056_009
Bekannt aus Game Of Thrones: Das US Unternehmen Colossal Biosciences hat erste Schattenwölfe zurückgekreuzt
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
**VIDEO AVAILABLE: CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE**
‘De-extinction’ company Colossal Biosciences have announced the healthy births of their latest effort to bring prehistoric animals back from beyond the grave - ‘dire wolves’.
Today, the dire wolf was made famous by the hit HBO series Game of Thrones, as companions of the Stark family, but it was in fact an American canid that had previously been extinct for over 12,500 years.
The successful birth of three ‘dire wolves’ is the latest attempt by Colossal to ‘de-extinct’ animals - a project that to date has resulted in mice with wooly mammoth genes.
“I could not be more proud of the team. This massive milestone is the first of many coming examples demonstrating that our end-to-end de-extinction technology stack works,” says CEO of Colossal Ben Lamm. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies. It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on and its broader impact on conservation.”
Additionally, Colossal has birthed two litters of cloned red wolves, the most critically endangered wolf in the world, using a new approach to non-invasive blood cloning.
The three litters of Colossal’s dire wolves include two adolescent males (Romulus and Remus) and one female puppy (Khaleesi). Colossal also birthed two litters of red wolves from three different genetic founder lines. These litters include one adolescent female red wolf (Hope) and three male red wolf puppies (Blaze, Cinder, and Ash).
Sceptics, however, state that the grey wolf's genome is so similar to its dire wolf ancestor that it is difficult to say whether these are genuinely an example of de-extinction - or simply an example of genetically altering modern wolves to look like their legendary ancestor.
Colossal extracted ancient *** Local Caption **
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_177951556_POL
Macys of San Francisco festures adoptable kittens in their Christmas window displays
11/22/2024 - San Francisco, CA - California, USA: - People take footage of kittens on display at the San Francisco SPCA and Macy’s 38th annual Holiday Windows in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. The kittens are up for adoption. (Gabrielle Lurie / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
online_yes -
DUKAS_177951555_POL
Macys of San Francisco festures adoptable kittens in their Christmas window displays
11/22/2024 - San Francisco, CA - California, USA: - Kittens on display at the San Francisco SPCA and Macy’s 38th annual Holiday Windows in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. The kittens are up for adoption. (Gabrielle Lurie / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
online_yes -
DUKAS_177951554_POL
Macys of San Francisco festures adoptable kittens in their Christmas window displays
11/22/2024 - San Francisco, CA - California, USA: - SPCA worker prepares a kitten to meet with its new owner at the San Francisco SPCA and Macy’s 38th annual Holiday Windows in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. (Gabrielle Lurie / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_177951553_POL
Macys of San Francisco festures adoptable kittens in their Christmas window displays
11/22/2024 - San Francisco, CA - California, USA: - Passerby takes footage of kittens on display at the San Francisco SPCA and Macy’s 38th annual Holiday Windows in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. The kittens are up for adoption. (Gabrielle Lurie / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
online_yes -
DUKAS_177951552_POL
Macys of San Francisco festures adoptable kittens in their Christmas window displays
11/22/2024 - San Francisco, CA - California, USA: - Passerby takes footage of kittens on display at the San Francisco SPCA and Macy’s 38th annual Holiday Windows in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. The kittens are up for adoption. (Gabrielle Lurie / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
online_yes