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  2. John Legend Crawls Across the Floor in Just a Towel in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/john-legend-crawls-across...

    Legend's sneaky appearance had everybody talking in the comments section. "I’m sorry but I stopped listening when I saw John crawl across the floor in his towel.😂," one social media user wrote.

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  4. What is the towel challenge and how do you do it? - AOL

    www.aol.com/towel-challenge-185229618.html

    The only way to separate two closed rings is by breaking one But at least it looks like a ton of fun. The towel challenge requires two people to hold interlocked towels and then try to maneuver ...

  5. Kitsunebi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitsunebi

    Kimimori Sarashina, a researcher of local stories, summarizes the features of the kitsunebi as follows: in places where there was no presence of fire, mysterious flames like those of a paper lantern or a torch would appear in a line and flicker in and out, with fires that had gone out sometimes appearing in yet another place, so that if one attempted to chase after what was behind all this, it ...

  6. Tiʻitiʻi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiʻitiʻi

    In Samoan legend, the mythological figure Tiʻitiʻi Atalaga appears in legends very similar to those recounting the tales of the demigod Māui, found in other island cultures. In one such legend, which is almost identical to the New Zealand fire myth of Māui Tikitiki-a-Taranga, he succeeds in bringing fire to the people of Samoa after a ...

  7. Rainbow crow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow_crow

    The story of the Rainbow Crow is a supposed Lenape legend, symbolizing the value of selflessness and service. However, the Lenape origins of this myth are denied by the Lenape-Nanticoke Museum, which attributes the myth to a recent modification of a Cherokee story known as the "First Fire".

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  9. Kachi-kachi Yama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kachi-kachi_Yama

    Kachi-kachi Yama (かちかち山, kachi-kachi being an onomatopoeia of the sound a fire makes and yama meaning "mountain", roughly translates to "Fire-Crackle Mountain"), also known as Kachi-Kachi Mountain and The Farmer and the Badger, is a Japanese folktale in which a tanuki is the villain, rather than the more usual boisterous, well-endowed ...