What’s Brewing With Jen-A Concrete Tomb For Cheetos
See what was brewing with Jen Scordo today! Every day Jen shares 3 recent news stories. Today she had one about an artist creating a tomb for a single bag…

NEW YORK, NY – SEPTEMBER 21: Cheetos Brand Takes First Official Online Cheetos Museum Into the ‘Real World’ of Grand Central Terminal on September 21, 2016 in New York City.
(Photo by Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images for Cheetos)See what was brewing with Jen Scordo today! Every day Jen shares 3 recent news stories. Today she had one about an artist creating a tomb for a single bag of Cheetos, Harry Styles being deleted with Skittles, and a professor on the search for Alien Tech on the ocean floor. Here are the stories she shared today.
Artist Creates a Tomb For a Bag of Flaming Hot Cheetos
Imagine 10,000 years from now you are an archeologist. You unearth a hidden concert tomb. What is inside it? Some clue into what culture was like 10,000 years ago. You carefully open it. And inside, there is a single bag of Flaming Hot Cheetos. That is a scenario that is now possible. Artist Sunday Nobody spent $1200 to construct a tomb for the Cheetos. He buried them, with a plaque saying "Historical Artifact Buried Below. Do Not Open for 10,000 Years." And for his trouble, Cheetos has awarded him free Flaming Hot Cheetos for 30 years.
Harry Styles Pelted In Eye With Skittles
Someone at a recent Harry Styles approach to getting him to "Taste the Rainbow." Someone at his concert pelted Styles in the face with Skittles with at least one catching him in the eye. Harry for his part took it in stride. He continued to perform and blow kisses to his fans, only politely asking them to not throw more Skittles. His fans were less cordial about it. There was instant outrage online. One fan even quote tweeted a report that the world population is now 8 billion, saying it is about to be 7,999,999 once they find the person who threw the Skittles.
Professor Looking To Find Alien Spacecraft He Thinks is On Ocean Floor
Astrophysicist Avi Loeb, a professor at Harvard, believes that 10 years ago an alien spacecraft crashed into the ocean off of Papua New Guinea. And now he is setting off to find proof. The head of the Galileo Project recently received $1.5 million in funding for an expedition to prove his theory. The object that crashed around a decade ago was determined interstellar. But the popular consensus was that it was a meteor. But Loeb believes it was a spacecraft, and will now attempt to prove it. It would suck to spend millions just to find a rock at the bottom of the ocean.