what makes people do stunts like this?

kanchelskis14 said:
Not as good as the others i don't think. The best thing was that the friends tried their best for it not to be stopped! Have you got links to the other ones you've posted, perhaps download links?


I think you've seen them all...I checked a few of the threads where i posted them and you are always in them laughing ;)


I'll post a few...let me just look.

http://www.big-boys.com/articles/chickfight.html

http://www.big-boys.com/articles/lawncatfight.html

http://www.big-boys.com/articles/catfightparty.html

http://www.big-boys.com/articles/ultcatfight.html
 
you'll love this... :lol:


http://www.usapublications.com/savage12.html


The claws come out: Teen catfights on rise on the T
By Laurel J. Sweet
Monday, October 10, 2005 - Updated: 10:31 AM EST

Cops are grappling with escalating girl-on-girl violence in Boston as fights have become so intense that the ``fair'' sex is even caking faces with Vaseline to give attackers' nails the slip.

Four flare-ups between female youths at two stations on the Red and Orange lines were doused on Sept. 26 alone, according to an internal memo the Herald obtained from the MBTA. Transit police are now sending a Female Intervention Team into schools.

``Girls like to look for problems,'' said sophomore Giselle Colon, 15, on her way home from high school one recent afternoon.

``They gossip a lot. They start rumors. And that's how you start fights. My mom says, `Don't fight. But if someone hits you, hit back.' ''

Suffolk Law School's Juvenile Justice Center has teamed with the Operation Stop Watch partnership of Transit, Boston and school police and Suffolk juvenile probation officers to understand how and why female youths, typically ages 13 to 17, express anger.

``We've learned, as we suspected, that there is a definite spike in female youth problems, arrests and incarceration,'' said Transit Police Lt. Mark Gillespie, whose department has arrested a half-dozen teenage girls since the start of the school year for brawling in MBTA stations.

Police said that in preparation for battle, girls will grease their faces with petroleum jelly and tie their tresses back so it's harder for opponents to grab a fistful.

``When males fight,'' Gillespie said, ``they fight and it's over. When girls fight, it's an automatic audience.

``If they were given a forum like this, God knows what could happen,'' he said, glancing around the bustling Forest Hills Station in Jamaica Plain, where some 1,200 students from nine high schools cross paths between 2 and 3 p.m.

As of Oct. 1, girls accounted for 17 percent of the Department of Youth Service's committed caseload. Since 1995, the number of females committed to DYS has ballooned by 168 percent vs. an increase of only 7 percent by males for the same decade.

Tatiana Ojeda, 16, said she's seen plenty of girls fight. ``I see them pulling hair, swearing at each other, scratching with their nails, stomping on each other.''

Operation Stop Watch officers recently began passing out ``consequence'' wallet cards to students as a friendly reminder of what it means to be arrested, what being arrested can cost (a driver's license, a college loan) and who has access to juvenile court records.

``We use them as an icebreaker ? a way to talk to the kids,'' Gillespie said. ``We hope they'll read it. Usually, girls fight for the same reason boys do: Over nothing.''