Skip to main content

Jealous’ Dog Bites Man For Stealing Doggystyle & Using It On The Dog’s Owner (VIDEO)

A ‘jealous’ dog has bitten a man who was evidently caught stealing and using the Doggystyle on the dog’s owner in a new video that has just surfaced.

In the viral video sighted by OccupyGh.com, the jealous dog is seen as it watches the strange man steal the Doggystyle as he danced with the dog’s master.

Jealous’ Dog Bites Man For Stealing Doggystyle & Using It On The Dog’s Owner (VIDEO)

As if the time was right, the dog who could not take it any longer bounce on the man and bit him on the leg.

The dog, however, barked a couple of times as a warning but of course, the hard-hearted man was just deaf on the warning until he was bitten.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Funny

Popular posts from this blog

Cursed’ ship found completely intact 90 years after sinking

Cursed’ ship found completely intact 90 years after sinking ARCHAEOLOGISTS were thrilled when a 90-year-old "cursed" shipwreck was found in Canadian waters completely intact more than 90 years after it sank. SS Manasoo was a passenger vessel of 529 tonnes built in 1888 in Glasgow and began daily journeys from Hamilton to Toronto that year. But on September 15, 1928, the ship foundered off Griffith Island , Georgian Bay, with 16 lives lost while fighting a heavy storm, and capsized when her cargo of 116 cattle apparently shifted to one side. The recent addition of increased passenger accommodation on its upper deck is thought to have contributed to the instability and all five of the survivors drifted for 60 hours in a lifeboat before being picked up by a passing ship. But sailors have another theory. Originally owned by the S.S. Macassa Hamilton Steamship Company, the Scottish-built vessel was renamed SS Manasoo, its new title reflected the primary ports of call, Manitoulin I...

SA xenophobic attacks: 'Fake' videos stoke tension

SA xenophobic attacks: 'Fake' videos stoke tension This week saw a wave of looting and violence mostly targeting nationals of other African countries in South Africa. But some videos and images that have been shared on social media about the attacks are not all they seem. BBC Africa debunks some of the videos that went viral, which are old or even from other countries, but are being used as evidence of current events in South Africa.