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Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps
Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps

The Irish Sun

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps

OZZY Osbourne has sold five of his paintings — to save endangered chimps. The Black Sabbath frontman created the pictures with the help of the apes in a sanctuary. 1 Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne has sold five of his paintings to save endangered chimps Credit: getty One painting called Paranoid, which he made with chimp Janice at the Florida Save the Chimps centre, fetched £13,820. He also collaborated with three other chimps, Kramer, Sable and Sophie on, on the acrylic on canvas works. The five pictures raised a total of £54,040. They were sold by Omega Auctions in Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside. Read more on Ozzy Osbourne Ozzy, 76, who once bit the head off a bat at a concert in 1982, said: 'I paint because it gives me peace of mind. "But I don't sell my paintings. 'I've made an exception with these collaborations as it raises money for Save the Chimps, a sanctuary for apes rescued from labs, roadside zoos and wildlife traffickers.' Save the Chimps provides refuge and lifetime care to hundreds of chimpanzees. Most read in Celebrity The apes receive top-notch veterinary care, nutritious meals, and a variety of social enrichments - including painting. Ozzy Osbourne takes to stage for final time with Black Sabbath band mates in front of delighted rock fans

Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps
Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps

Scottish Sun

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps

Read on to find out how much the Black Sabbath legend has raised OZZY'S HUGE GIFT Ozzy Osbourne sells five of his paintings for huge sum to save endangered chimps Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) OZZY Osbourne has sold five of his paintings — to save endangered chimps. The Black Sabbath frontman created the pictures with the help of the apes in a sanctuary. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 1 Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne has sold five of his paintings to save endangered chimps Credit: getty One painting called Paranoid, which he made with chimp Janice at the Florida Save the Chimps centre, fetched £13,820. He also collaborated with three other chimps, Kramer, Sable and Sophie on, on the acrylic on canvas works. The five pictures raised a total of £54,040. They were sold by Omega Auctions in Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside. Ozzy, 76, who once bit the head off a bat at a concert in 1982, said: 'I paint because it gives me peace of mind. "But I don't sell my paintings. 'I've made an exception with these collaborations as it raises money for Save the Chimps, a sanctuary for apes rescued from labs, roadside zoos and wildlife traffickers.' Save the Chimps provides refuge and lifetime care to hundreds of chimpanzees. The apes receive top-notch veterinary care, nutritious meals, and a variety of social enrichments - including painting.

Ozzy Osbourne announces 'Last Rites' memoir, Save the Chimps collaboration

time10-07-2025

  • Entertainment

Ozzy Osbourne announces 'Last Rites' memoir, Save the Chimps collaboration

For a man who just retired from the live stage, Ozzy Osbourne sure has a lot going on. The "Prince of Darkness," who played his final gig July 5 during Black Sabbath's Back to the Beginning farewell concert, has announced a new memoir titled "Last Rites." In the book, due out Oct. 7 via Grand Central Publishing, Ozzy details his recent health struggles. "People say to me, if you could do it all again, knowing what you know now, would you change anything?" Osbourne writes, according to a press release. "I'm like, f*** no. If I'd been clean and sober, I wouldn't be Ozzy. If I'd done normal, sensible things, I wouldn't be Ozzy." "Look, if it ends tomorrow, I can't complain," the metal icon continues. "I've been all around the world. Seen a lot of things. I've done good... and I've done bad. But right now, I'm not ready to go anywhere." "Last Rites" also includes reflections on Osbourne's relationship with his wife Sharon, as well as his encounters with fellow rockers Slash, Bon Scott, John Bonham, and Keith Moon, and "the harrowing final moments he spent with Motörhead's Lemmy Kilmister," according to the press release. As if putting out a book weren't enough, Osbourne also announced a collaboration with the nonprofit chimpanzee sanctuary Save the Chimps on Thursday. As part of the project, Osbourne said he painted five pieces that were completed with brushstrokes from chimps saved from laboratories. "I paint because it gives me peace of mind, but I don't sell my paintings," Osbourne said in a statement on the Omega Auctions website, where fans can bid on the paintings. "I've made an exception with these collaborations as it raises money for Save the Chimps, a sanctuary for hundreds of apes rescued from labs, roadside zoos and wildlife traffickers." The paintings are up for auction through July 17 via Omega Auctions.

'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone
'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone

It was January 1961, and NASA was in its early years of existence. John F. Kennedy would soon declare the nation's goal of landing a man on the moon in that decade. But the country's best scientists still knew very little about what a human would go through during a trip to space, so they turned to the closest animal they could think of to test it out: chimpanzees. Friday, Jan. 31, marks the anniversary of Ham the chimpanzee's space flight, which happened 64 years ago. Though not the first animal sent to space, Ham was the first hominid – any species including humans in the great ape category – to make it there. Ham ‒ who was about 3-and-a-half years old at the time of the flight ‒ not only survived, but was able to carry out tasks he was trained to perform. Previously, monkeys, mice and others had been tested on in their own space flights, including tests that ended fatally for the animals. Ham's flight would directly pave the way for the first American to go to space just months later, astronaut Alan Shepard, and indeed eventually make to the moon in 1969. Shepard's May 5, 1961, suborbital flight was a success but Soviet Union was still the first to send a human to space, soon after Ham's trip. Still, the chimp's contribution to space research is regarded today as a vital stepping stone in what would be extremely rapid development within the U.S. space program. "We can't forget about Ham and how important his experience was to telling us what we needed to know to get that confidence to put a human in space and to continue on, which would ultimately lead to the success of Apollo in July of 1969," Brian Odom, NASA's chief historian, told USA TODAY. Photos of Ham in a little space suit strapped into his space capsule or interacting with his trainers on the ground evoke awe at the lovable creature's accomplishments, but a closer look at Ham's story reveals the ordeal he went through to pave the way for Americans to send people into space. "He didn't have a choice. His life and his ability to live freely as a chimpanzee was taken away from him," said Ana Paula Tavares, the CEO of the nonprofit Save the Chimps, which operates a sanctuary for chimpanzees in Florida. The organization was founded in the 90s when its founder, the late Dr. Carole Noon, sued the Air Force for custody of some of the chimps it used for space research. Ham's was an "unwilling sacrifice," Save the Chimps' website says. 'They have bravely served their country. They are heroes and veterans," Noon once said of chimpanzees used in space research. The pushback is part of a larger trend of animal rights activists who have called for an end to many kinds of testing on animals. But the practice continues in various forms such as drug research and has led to countless scientific advancements. Ham got his name from the Holloman Aero Medical Center, at the Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico, where he underwent training. At the time of his space flight, he was estimated to be about 3-and-a-half years old. He'd been originally captured in the former French Cameroons and was purchased by the U.S. Air Force in 1959. Ham, previously known as subject No. 65, was one of a group of dozens of chimpanzees trained and analyzed. As time got closer to launch, the group was narrowed to the healthiest and best performing chimps, and ultimately Ham was selected to make the trip. After his space flight, Ham was sent to D.C.'s National Zoo for 17 years, where he lived alone, and was later transferred to the North Carolina Zoological Park until his death at about 26-years-old. NASA used Ham to test the Mercury Redstone rocket before humans were sent into space, and to see what effects space travel could have on human bodies, as chimps were considered physiologically close. Specifically, scientists hoped to discover how the human body would be impacted by weightlessness and acceleration, and whether cognitive functioning would be impacted. This was important to understanding whether humans could carry out complex tasks on their own space trips. Ham was trained using rewards of food and punishments of electric shocks to respond to differently colored lights by pressing on levers. During his mission, scientists wanted to see whether his response time would be impacted by the still relatively unknown demands of space travel. "(T)hey specifically wanted a brainy animal like a chimp to see if space flight interfered with the ability to perform cognitive tasks," Larry Carbone, a veterinarian and visiting fellow at Harvard Law School's Animal Law and Policy Program, said in an email. Ham was attached to several different sensors to monitor his heartrate, temperature and other vitals and strapped into a capsule called a "couch" that would hopefully allow him to keep breathing if pressure in the rocket failed. There were issues with the flight, Odom said. A technical problem with a booster caused the Mercury capsule to be pushed beyond its intended altitude and landing point. According to NASA, it was supposed to reach an altitude of 115 miles and speeds up to 4,400 mph. Ham's aircraft reached an altitude of 157 miles and a speed of 5,857 mph. He experienced 6.6 minutes of weightlessness during the 16.5-minute flight. The error caused Ham to be subjected to forces "far beyond what we would want a human to experience, 15 times the force of gravity at one point in the deceleration," Odom said. Despite this, Ham performed his tasks well with only a slight delay during the deceleration, researchers found. He was dehydrated and exhausted when he was fished out of the ocean after landing, having spent several hours restrained in his couch. Further examination showed that he was in relatively good shape, and didn't sustain any lasting effects from the trip, Odom said. "They feel very confident from this experience that a human will be able to survive it," Odom said. Ham's ordeal has drawn scrutiny as a greater public understanding of just how similar chimpanzees are to humans has grown. The flight was before the popularization of Jane Goodall's research, which Carbone said can be credited for increased awareness of chimps as "our intelligent, sensitive cousins." Ham was still a baby when he was sent into space, Tavares said. Had he not been captured and bought for research, he would still have been nursing at the time of his space flight, she said. Ham was trained for over 200 hours before his flight, which included applying electric shocks to the soles of his feet when he didn't respond correctly to the lights. To monitor Ham while in orbit, a number of sensors were attached to him, including a rectal thermometer probe that was inserted about 8 inches into his rectum, according to a report published after the research. He was restrained in the couch for hours and had his sleep cut short the night before his launch. When he landed, Ham had an abrasion on his nose, was dehydrated and had lost over 5% of his body weight. Upon landing, "what most people see and think is a smile on his face, is a grin that we all know... is an expression that chimps have when they are super stressed and terrified," Tavares said. Later, when veterinarians tried (and failed) to put Ham back in a similar capsule in front of members of the media, "The normally cheerful chimp balked, screeched and hugged his handler's neck," the El Paso Times reported in 1961. NASA still sometimes sends animals to space, but we won't be seeing these kinds of experiments on chimpanzees again, Odom said. That's partly because of evolving standards – chimpanzees are now listed as endangered – and because there's no longer the same need for such tests. "I think NASA understood at the time that these tests were critical to gaining a level of confidence ... So these tests were very critical that process," Odom said. Tavares said even Ham's retirement was inadequate; chimps are social creatures and he should have been able to live out his years with others like him. She likes to think that people didn't know better then, and said that's why it's important to remember Ham today. "We honor and remember not only Ham, but all of the other chimpanzees and the descendants of those chimpanzees here at the sanctuary and elsewhere that sacrificed their life unwillingly, but did so for the advancement of a technology that we all benefit from to to this day," Tavares said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ham the chimpanzee made controversial space history 64 years ago

'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone
'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone

USA Today

time31-01-2025

  • Science
  • USA Today

'We can't forget about Ham': Friday marks controversial space exploration milestone

It was January 1961, and NASA was in its early years of existence. John F. Kennedy would soon declare the nation's goal of landing a man on the moon in that decade. But the country's best scientists still knew very little about what a human would go through during a trip to space, so they turned to the closest animal they could think of to test it out: chimpanzees. Friday, Jan. 31, marks the anniversary of Ham the chimpanzee's space flight, which happened 64 years ago. Though not the first animal sent to space, Ham was the first hominid – any species including humans in the great ape category – to make it there. Ham ‒ who was about 3-and-a-half years old at the time of the flight ‒ not only survived, but was able to carry out tasks he was trained to perform. Previously, monkeys, mice and others had been tested on in their own space flights, including tests that ended fatally for the animals. Ham's flight would directly pave the way for the first American to go to space just months later, astronaut Alan Shepard, and indeed eventually make to the moon in 1969. Shepard's May 5, 1961, suborbital flight was a success but Soviet Union was still the first to send a human to space, soon after Ham's trip. Still, the chimp's contribution to space research is regarded today as a vital stepping stone in what would be extremely rapid development within the U.S. space program. "We can't forget about Ham and how important his experience was to telling us what we needed to know to get that confidence to put a human in space and to continue on, which would ultimately lead to the success of Apollo in July of 1969," Brian Odom, NASA's chief historian, told USA TODAY. Photos of Ham in a little space suit strapped into his space capsule or interacting with his trainers on the ground evoke awe at the lovable creature's accomplishments, but a closer look at Ham's story reveals the ordeal he went through to pave the way for Americans to send people into space. "He didn't have a choice. His life and his ability to live freely as a chimpanzee was taken away from him," said Ana Paula Tavares, the CEO of the nonprofit Save the Chimps, which operates a sanctuary for chimpanzees in Florida. The organization was founded in the 90s when its founder, the late Dr. Carole Noon, sued the Air Force for custody of some of the chimps it used for space research. Ham's was an "unwilling sacrifice," Save the Chimps' website says. 'They have bravely served their country. They are heroes and veterans," Noon once said of chimpanzees used in space research. The pushback is part of a larger trend of animal rights activists who have called for an end to many kinds of testing on animals. But the practice continues in various forms such as drug research and has led to countless scientific advancements. What to know about Ham the chimpanzee Ham got his name from the Holloman Aero Medical Center, at the Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico, where he underwent training. At the time of his space flight, he was estimated to be about 3-and-a-half years old. He'd been originally captured in the former French Cameroons and was purchased by the U.S. Air Force in 1959. Ham, previously known as subject No. 65, was one of a group of dozens of chimpanzees trained and analyzed. As time got closer to launch, the group was narrowed to the healthiest and best performing chimps, and ultimately Ham was selected to make the trip. After his space flight, Ham was sent to D.C.'s National Zoo for 17 years, where he lived alone, and was later transferred to the North Carolina Zoological Park until his death at about 26-years-old. What was Ham's mission? NASA used Ham to test the Mercury Redstone rocket before humans were sent into space, and to see what effects space travel could have on human bodies, as chimps were considered physiologically close. Specifically, scientists hoped to discover how the human body would be impacted by weightlessness and acceleration, and whether cognitive functioning would be impacted. This was important to understanding whether humans could carry out complex tasks on their own space trips. Ham was trained using rewards of food and punishments of electric shocks to respond to differently colored lights by pressing on levers. During his mission, scientists wanted to see whether his response time would be impacted by the still relatively unknown demands of space travel. "(T)hey specifically wanted a brainy animal like a chimp to see if space flight interfered with the ability to perform cognitive tasks," Larry Carbone, a veterinarian and visiting fellow at Harvard Law School's Animal Law and Policy Program, said in an email. Ham was attached to several different sensors to monitor his heartrate, temperature and other vitals and strapped into a capsule called a "couch" that would hopefully allow him to keep breathing if pressure in the rocket failed. There were issues with the flight, Odom said. A technical problem with a booster caused the Mercury capsule to be pushed beyond its intended altitude and landing point. According to NASA, it was supposed to reach an altitude of 115 miles and speeds up to 4,400 mph. Ham's aircraft reached an altitude of 157 miles and a speed of 5,857 mph. He experienced 6.6 minutes of weightlessness during the 16.5-minute flight. The error caused Ham to be subjected to forces "far beyond what we would want a human to experience, 15 times the force of gravity at one point in the deceleration," Odom said. Despite this, Ham performed his tasks well with only a slight delay during the deceleration, researchers found. He was dehydrated and exhausted when he was fished out of the ocean after landing, having spent several hours restrained in his couch. Further examination showed that he was in relatively good shape, and didn't sustain any lasting effects from the trip, Odom said. "They feel very confident from this experience that a human will be able to survive it," Odom said. The ethics of sending animals into orbit Ham's ordeal has drawn scrutiny as a greater public understanding of just how similar chimpanzees are to humans has grown. The flight was before the popularization of Jane Goodall's research, which Carbone said can be credited for increased awareness of chimps as "our intelligent, sensitive cousins." Ham was still a baby when he was sent into space, Tavares said. Had he not been captured and bought for research, he would still have been nursing at the time of his space flight, she said. Ham was trained for over 200 hours before his flight, which included applying electric shocks to the soles of his feet when he didn't respond correctly to the lights. To monitor Ham while in orbit, a number of sensors were attached to him, including a rectal thermometer probe that was inserted about 8 inches into his rectum, according to a report published after the research. He was restrained in the couch for hours and had his sleep cut short the night before his launch. When he landed, Ham had an abrasion on his nose, was dehydrated and had lost over 5% of his body weight. Upon landing, "what most people see and think is a smile on his face, is a grin that we all know... is an expression that chimps have when they are super stressed and terrified," Tavares said. Later, when veterinarians tried (and failed) to put Ham back in a similar capsule in front of members of the media, "The normally cheerful chimp balked, screeched and hugged his handler's neck," the El Paso Times reported in 1961. NASA still sometimes sends animals to space, but we won't be seeing these kinds of experiments on chimpanzees again, Odom said. That's partly because of evolving standards – chimpanzees are now listed as endangered – and because there's no longer the same need for such tests. "I think NASA understood at the time that these tests were critical to gaining a level of confidence ... So these tests were very critical that process," Odom said. Tavares said even Ham's retirement was inadequate; chimps are social creatures and he should have been able to live out his years with others like him. She likes to think that people didn't know better then, and said that's why it's important to remember Ham today. "We honor and remember not only Ham, but all of the other chimpanzees and the descendants of those chimpanzees here at the sanctuary and elsewhere that sacrificed their life unwillingly, but did so for the advancement of a technology that we all benefit from to to this day," Tavares said.

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