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  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonB.jpg
  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonD.jpg
  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonE.jpg
  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonF.jpg
  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonA.jpg
  • Tourists queue up outside the London Dungeons at London Bridge. The London Dungeon is a popular London tourist attraction,[1] which recreates various gory and macabre historical events in a grimly comedic 'gallows humour' style, attempting to make them appealing to younger audiences. It uses a mixture of live actors, special effects and rides.Opening in 1974, it was initially designed as more a museum of "horrible history", but the Dungeon has evolved to become an actor-led, interactive experience.
    13072011the london dungeonC.jpg
  • Stripped of their feathers, plucked ducks await the next stage during a family Foie Gras business in French Alsace. The Kessler family live on a farm in the quiet village of Boofzheim in Alsace, France. Their business is producing Foie Gras and they raise force-fed ducks near the German border region. A farmer has cut the throat of a duck, draining the body and especially the liver of blood. After tapping the head with a knife to render the animal unconscious. Newly-killed carcasses are strung up on a special rack. France produces and consumes the most Foie Gras in Europe using the French Gavage method of forcing ducks or geese to consume vast quantities of corn mash down the oesophagus two weeks before slaughter.
    alsace_geese1-13-10-1997_1.jpg
  • The Kessler family live on a farm in the quiet village of Boofzheim in Alsace, France. Their business is producing Foie Gras and they raise force-fed ducks near the German border region. The youngest member is daughter Mireille wearing a blood-stained apron. She is about to cut the throat of a duck, draining the body and especially the liver of blood. After tapping the head with a knife to render the animal unconscious, she stands in a pool of  blood from other birds which stains the courtyard floor. On the left, her parents and grandmother are plucking the feathers from newly-killed carcasses which are strung up on a special rack for this purpose. France produces and consumes the most Foie Gras in Europe using the French Gavage method of forcing ducks or geese to consume vast quatities of corn mash down the esophagus two weeks before slaughter.
    alsace_ducks01_1.jpg
  • A mangled, headless, pigeon lies on the pavement on London's Piccadily in the capital. The gory corpse of the bird that has somehow been torn apart lies on the street for pedestrians to avoid as they pass-by near Bond Street. Its wing is splayed out in the shadows and a single foot sticks out in sunlight, the end of an existence on London's buildings, looking for scraps and crumbs.
    dead_pigeon01-06-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Raffan and Chi-Chi perform a grisly street magic routine. At turns bawdy, lewd and gory, Raffans act is a master class in keeping the audience rapt, while keeping one eye out for the police (who must be bribed to turn a blind eye). The act which culminates in Chi-Chi being assaulted, draws a big crowd who genuinely didnt seem to realise it was fake blood. For the show, Raffan made nearly Rs1000. Shadipur Depot, New Delhi, India<br />
The Kathiputli Colony in the Shadipur Depot slum is home to hundreds of (originally Rajasthani) performers. The artistes who live here - from magicians, acrobats, musicians, dancers and puppeteers are often international renowed by always return to the Shadipur slum.
    sfe_020717_0011.jpg
  • Raffan and Chi-Chi perform grisly street magic routine. At turns bawdy, lewd and gory, Raffan, the act is a master class in keeping the audience rapt, while keeping one eye out for the police (who must be bribed to turn a blind eye). The act which culminates in Chi-Chi being assaulted, draws a big crowd who genuinely did not seem to realise it was fake blood. For the show, Raffan made nearly Rs1000.The Kathiputli Colony in the Shadipur Depot slum is home to hundreds of (originally Rajasthani) performers. The artistes who live here - from magicians, acrobats, musicians, dancers and puppeteers are often international renowed by always return to the Shadipur slum.
    11_SFE_020717_0010.jpg
  • Raffan and Chi-Chi perform grisly street magic routine. At turns bawdy, lewd and gory, Raffans act is a master class in keeping the audience rapt, while keeping one eye out for the police (who must be bribed to turn a blind eye). The act which culminates in Chi-Chi being assaulted, draws a big crowd who genuinely didnt seem to realise it was fake blood. For the show, Raffan made nearly Rs1000. Shadipur Depot, New Delhi, India<br />
The Kathiputli Colony in the Shadipur Depot slum is home to hundreds of (originally Rajasthani) performers. The artistes who live here - from magicians, acrobats, musicians, dancers and puppeteers are often international renowed by always return to the Shadipur slum.
    sfe_020717_0026.jpg
  • Pedestrians walk around a mangled, headless, pigeon lies on the pavement on London's Piccadily. The gory corpse of the bird that has somehow been torn apart lies on the street for pedestrians to avoid as they pass-by near Bond Street. Its wing is splayed out in the shadows and a single foot sticks out in sunlight, the end of an existence on London's buildings, looking for scraps and crumbs.
    dead_pigeon02-06-03-2015_1.jpg
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