A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a
request with
the right
Accept
header
to the server to view the underlying object.
{
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"content": "Bilal Sarwary: 'The plane hit the tower and all our lives changed'<br /><br /><br />Afghan journalist Bilal Sarwary saw the Taliban toppled in 2001 and his country transformed. But in his view, as he explains here, the US missed an opportunity to try to bring lasting peace. And in the last two weeks the path of his homeland took a terrifying twist, one that put his own life in danger.<br /><br />In 2001, I was a carpet salesman at the Pearl Continental Hotel in Peshawar, Pakistan, having yet another unremarkable day at work.<br /><br />I'll never forget glancing up at the TV in a brief moment between sales, only to witness firsthand the dramatic footage as a passenger plane careered into the World Trade Center in New York. Then the second plane, and another at the Pentagon.<br /><br />None of our lives would ever be the same.<br /><br />International attention immediately focused on Afghanistan where the ruling Taliban were accused of providing a sanctuary for the attack's prime suspects - Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaeda movement.<br /><br />Only the next day, there were suddenly hundreds of foreign media crews crowding the hotel's lobby, desperate for anyone who could speak English to assist them as a translator as they crossed the nearby border into Afghanistan. I took up that offer and I haven't stopped since.<br /><br /><br />I hadn't lived in Afghanistan since I was a child - our family had fled the violence during the civil war in the 1990s when the Soviet troops withdrew. So when I entered Kabul for the first time again after all those years, I was shocked to discover the destruction, with buildings reduced to rubble and twisted metal. All signs of hustle and bustle had vanished. The people were so poor, and there was so much fear.<br /><br />I was initially working with Abu Dhabi TV and was based in the Intercontinental Hotel with five other journalists. I woke up every morning clouded in a haze of fear, as Kabul became the primary focus of American airstrikes. Known al-Qaeda operatives and Taliban came and went from our hotel, and we saw them wandering in nearby streets. Explosions rang through the night. I wondered if our hotel would be next.<br /><br />And then one morning in early December, the Taliban were gone.<br /><br />Within hours, people were lining up again outside barber shops to have their beards trimmed. Rhythmic Afghan music filled the streets, filling the vacuum left by explosions. Afghanistan was born again that morning.<br />",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:30:10+00:00",
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"content": "Bilal Sarwary: 'The plane hit the tower and all our lives changed'\n\n\nAfghan journalist Bilal Sarwary saw the Taliban toppled in 2001 and his country transformed. But in his view, as he explains here, the US missed an opportunity to try to bring lasting peace. And in the last two weeks the path of his homeland took a terrifying twist, one that put his own life in danger.\n\nIn 2001, I was a carpet salesman at the Pearl Continental Hotel in Peshawar, Pakistan, having yet another unremarkable day at work.\n\nI'll never forget glancing up at the TV in a brief moment between sales, only to witness firsthand the dramatic footage as a passenger plane careered into the World Trade Center in New York. Then the second plane, and another at the Pentagon.\n\nNone of our lives would ever be the same.\n\nInternational attention immediately focused on Afghanistan where the ruling Taliban were accused of providing a sanctuary for the attack's prime suspects - Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaeda movement.\n\nOnly the next day, there were suddenly hundreds of foreign media crews crowding the hotel's lobby, desperate for anyone who could speak English to assist them as a translator as they crossed the nearby border into Afghanistan. I took up that offer and I haven't stopped since.\n\n\nI hadn't lived in Afghanistan since I was a child - our family had fled the violence during the civil war in the 1990s when the Soviet troops withdrew. So when I entered Kabul for the first time again after all those years, I was shocked to discover the destruction, with buildings reduced to rubble and twisted metal. All signs of hustle and bustle had vanished. The people were so poor, and there was so much fear.\n\nI was initially working with Abu Dhabi TV and was based in the Intercontinental Hotel with five other journalists. I woke up every morning clouded in a haze of fear, as Kabul became the primary focus of American airstrikes. Known al-Qaeda operatives and Taliban came and went from our hotel, and we saw them wandering in nearby streets. Explosions rang through the night. I wondered if our hotel would be next.\n\nAnd then one morning in early December, the Taliban were gone.\n\nWithin hours, people were lining up again outside barber shops to have their beards trimmed. Rhythmic Afghan music filled the streets, filling the vacuum left by explosions. Afghanistan was born again that morning.\n",
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"content": "Afghanistan: The 'undefeated' Panjshir Valley - an hour from Kabul<br /><br /><br />Several thousand anti-Taliban fighters are reported to be holding out against the Taliban in a remote valley with a narrow entrance - little more than 30 miles or so from the capital Kabul.<br /><br />It's not the first time the dramatic and imposing Panjshir Valley has been a flashpoint in Afghanistan's recent turbulent history - having been a stronghold against Soviet forces in the 1980s, and the Taliban in the '90s.<br /><br />The group holding out there now - the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRF) - recently reminded the world of the valley's strength.<br /><br />\"The Red Army, with its might, was unable to defeat us... And the Taliban also 25 years ago... they tried to take over the valley and they failed, they faced a crushing defeat,\" Ali Nazary, the NRF's head of foreign relations, told the BBC.<br /><br />Short presentational grey line<br />The long, deep and dusty valley stretches about 75 miles (120km) - south-west to north-east - to the north of the Afghan capital Kabul. It is protected by high mountain peaks - rising 9,800ft (3,000m) above the valley floor. They are an imposing natural barrier - protection for the people living there.<br /><br />There is only one narrow road in, which winds its way between large rocky outcrops and the meandering Panjshir River.<br /><br />\"There is a mythical aspect to the entire area. It's not just one valley. Once you get into it there are at least another 21 sub valleys connected,\" says Shakib Sharifi, who lived there as a child, but left Afghanistan after the Taliban took control.<br /><br />At the far end of the main valley, a trail leads up to the 4,430m (14,534ft) Anjoman Pass and heads further east into the Hindu Kush mountains. The armies of Alexander the Great and Tamerlane - the last of the great nomadic conquerors of Central Asia - both passed this way.<br /><br />\"Historically, the Panjshir Valley was also known for mining - including semi-precious jewels,\" says Elisabeth Leake, associate professor of international history at the University of Leeds.<br /><br />",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:28:02+00:00",
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"content": "Afghanistan: The 'undefeated' Panjshir Valley - an hour from Kabul\n\n\nSeveral thousand anti-Taliban fighters are reported to be holding out against the Taliban in a remote valley with a narrow entrance - little more than 30 miles or so from the capital Kabul.\n\nIt's not the first time the dramatic and imposing Panjshir Valley has been a flashpoint in Afghanistan's recent turbulent history - having been a stronghold against Soviet forces in the 1980s, and the Taliban in the '90s.\n\nThe group holding out there now - the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRF) - recently reminded the world of the valley's strength.\n\n\"The Red Army, with its might, was unable to defeat us... And the Taliban also 25 years ago... they tried to take over the valley and they failed, they faced a crushing defeat,\" Ali Nazary, the NRF's head of foreign relations, told the BBC.\n\nShort presentational grey line\nThe long, deep and dusty valley stretches about 75 miles (120km) - south-west to north-east - to the north of the Afghan capital Kabul. It is protected by high mountain peaks - rising 9,800ft (3,000m) above the valley floor. They are an imposing natural barrier - protection for the people living there.\n\nThere is only one narrow road in, which winds its way between large rocky outcrops and the meandering Panjshir River.\n\n\"There is a mythical aspect to the entire area. It's not just one valley. Once you get into it there are at least another 21 sub valleys connected,\" says Shakib Sharifi, who lived there as a child, but left Afghanistan after the Taliban took control.\n\nAt the far end of the main valley, a trail leads up to the 4,430m (14,534ft) Anjoman Pass and heads further east into the Hindu Kush mountains. The armies of Alexander the Great and Tamerlane - the last of the great nomadic conquerors of Central Asia - both passed this way.\n\n\"Historically, the Panjshir Valley was also known for mining - including semi-precious jewels,\" says Elisabeth Leake, associate professor of international history at the University of Leeds.\n\n",
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"content": "Emma Raducanu was not even a teenager when she had to make a big decision about her future.<br /><br />It was a choice she made reluctantly.<br /><br />Having been encouraged to take up a variety of sports by her father Ian - including horse riding, swimming and basketball - she was particularly enamoured with motocross.<br /><br />\"I was racing go-karts for a year or two when I was younger - about eight - and then at 10 I transitioned into motocross,\" she told Amazon Prime earlier this week.<br /><br />\"I'm into motor sports but I couldn't carry on with it as my tennis career progressed. It turned out pretty well.\"<br /><br />That has proved to be an understatement. Little more than five years later, the 18-year-old has reached a Grand Slam final.<br /><br />With a steely composure in executing her skills, and an effervescent personality endearing her to fans across the globe, Raducanu has emerged as a star.<br /><br />Having burst on to the professional scene by reaching the fourth round at Wimbledon in July, she has surpassed that by reaching the US Open final in only her fourth tour-level event.<br /><br />\"She has a great attitude, she is smart and is doing extremely well - I'm sure she will continue along the right path,\" said Britain's former world number one Andy Murray.<br /><br />'Calm & composed' Raducanu rising to every challenge<br />'Crazy, cool & mind-blowing' - Raducanu on shock run to New York final<br />Teenager Raducanu reaches US Open final<br />Raducanu set to be best paid British sportswoman<br />The sporting prodigy shaped by her parents<br />Raducanu's rise has been heavily influenced by her Chinese mother Renee and Romanian father Ian, who both work in the finance sector and moved to London from Canada when their Toronto-born daughter was two.<br /><br />First grabbing a tennis racquet at the age of five, Raducanu went on to join the Bromley Tennis Academy before her potential was spotted by the Lawn Tennis Association.<br /><br />The governing body took Raducanu under its wing from an early age, with the youngster taking part in camps and trips abroad before progressing through the age groups.",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:26:40+00:00",
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"content": "Emma Raducanu was not even a teenager when she had to make a big decision about her future.\n\nIt was a choice she made reluctantly.\n\nHaving been encouraged to take up a variety of sports by her father Ian - including horse riding, swimming and basketball - she was particularly enamoured with motocross.\n\n\"I was racing go-karts for a year or two when I was younger - about eight - and then at 10 I transitioned into motocross,\" she told Amazon Prime earlier this week.\n\n\"I'm into motor sports but I couldn't carry on with it as my tennis career progressed. It turned out pretty well.\"\n\nThat has proved to be an understatement. Little more than five years later, the 18-year-old has reached a Grand Slam final.\n\nWith a steely composure in executing her skills, and an effervescent personality endearing her to fans across the globe, Raducanu has emerged as a star.\n\nHaving burst on to the professional scene by reaching the fourth round at Wimbledon in July, she has surpassed that by reaching the US Open final in only her fourth tour-level event.\n\n\"She has a great attitude, she is smart and is doing extremely well - I'm sure she will continue along the right path,\" said Britain's former world number one Andy Murray.\n\n'Calm & composed' Raducanu rising to every challenge\n'Crazy, cool & mind-blowing' - Raducanu on shock run to New York final\nTeenager Raducanu reaches US Open final\nRaducanu set to be best paid British sportswoman\nThe sporting prodigy shaped by her parents\nRaducanu's rise has been heavily influenced by her Chinese mother Renee and Romanian father Ian, who both work in the finance sector and moved to London from Canada when their Toronto-born daughter was two.\n\nFirst grabbing a tennis racquet at the age of five, Raducanu went on to join the Bromley Tennis Academy before her potential was spotted by the Lawn Tennis Association.\n\nThe governing body took Raducanu under its wing from an early age, with the youngster taking part in camps and trips abroad before progressing through the age groups.",
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"content": "Barbados to Rotherham: Lizard's 4,000-mile trip hidden in bra<br /><br /><br />A lingerie-loving lizard was found lounging in a bra after travelling all the way from Barbados to sunny Yorkshire on a transatlantic flight.<br /><br />The tiny gecko, now called Barbie, was spotted by Lisa Russell as she unpacked her suitcase after arriving back at her home near Rotherham, South Yorkshire.<br /><br />Ms Russell said: \"When it moved, I started screaming. It is not what you expect to find in your bra after a 4,000-mile journey.\"<br /><br />Barbie is now safe in the RSPCA's care.<br /><br />The returning holidaymaker, who lives in Thrybergh, arrived home on Tuesday and started to unpack her suitcase after holidaying in the Caribbean.<br /><br />Ms Russell, 47, saw what she thought was a speck on her bra and shook the underwear and it was then she spotted the female lizard moving.<br /><br />\"The tiny lizard was lucky as the bra was on top of my suitcase on my clean pile. As it was so hot out there, I didn't bother wearing one,\" the beautician said.<br /><br />Ms Russell revealed that the gecko remained unharmed in its lacy lair despite her sitting on the full suitcase in order to zip it up before her return journey to Yorkshire.<br /><br />Barbie the lizard, named after the famous doll and the lizard's island home, had survived 24 hours in the garment uninjured.<br />An RSPCA inspector was dispatched to deal with the tiny survivor, which appeared unscathed after its underwear odyssey.<br /><br />Sandra Dransfield, of the RSPCA, said releasing the lizard in the UK would be illegal as it was a non-native species and it \"would not survive in our climate\".<br /><br />The gecko was taken in by a specialist reptile keeper where she is said to be doing well.",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:26:23+00:00",
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"content": "Barbados to Rotherham: Lizard's 4,000-mile trip hidden in bra\n\n\nA lingerie-loving lizard was found lounging in a bra after travelling all the way from Barbados to sunny Yorkshire on a transatlantic flight.\n\nThe tiny gecko, now called Barbie, was spotted by Lisa Russell as she unpacked her suitcase after arriving back at her home near Rotherham, South Yorkshire.\n\nMs Russell said: \"When it moved, I started screaming. It is not what you expect to find in your bra after a 4,000-mile journey.\"\n\nBarbie is now safe in the RSPCA's care.\n\nThe returning holidaymaker, who lives in Thrybergh, arrived home on Tuesday and started to unpack her suitcase after holidaying in the Caribbean.\n\nMs Russell, 47, saw what she thought was a speck on her bra and shook the underwear and it was then she spotted the female lizard moving.\n\n\"The tiny lizard was lucky as the bra was on top of my suitcase on my clean pile. As it was so hot out there, I didn't bother wearing one,\" the beautician said.\n\nMs Russell revealed that the gecko remained unharmed in its lacy lair despite her sitting on the full suitcase in order to zip it up before her return journey to Yorkshire.\n\nBarbie the lizard, named after the famous doll and the lizard's island home, had survived 24 hours in the garment uninjured.\nAn RSPCA inspector was dispatched to deal with the tiny survivor, which appeared unscathed after its underwear odyssey.\n\nSandra Dransfield, of the RSPCA, said releasing the lizard in the UK would be illegal as it was a non-native species and it \"would not survive in our climate\".\n\nThe gecko was taken in by a specialist reptile keeper where she is said to be doing well.",
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"content": "Red carpet debut for 'Bennifer' 2.0 in Venice<br />Red carpet debut for 'Bennifer' 2.0 in Venice<br />Close<br />Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, often affectionately called \"Bennifer\" by fans, have walked the red carpet together for the first time since reuniting as a couple.<br /><br />They posed for photographers as they arrived for the premiere of The Last Duel at the 78th annual Venice International Film Festival.<br /><br />Their last red carpet appearance together was almost 20 years ago for the premiere of the film Gigli in 2003.",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:25:35+00:00",
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"content": "Red carpet debut for 'Bennifer' 2.0 in Venice\nRed carpet debut for 'Bennifer' 2.0 in Venice\nClose\nBen Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, often affectionately called \"Bennifer\" by fans, have walked the red carpet together for the first time since reuniting as a couple.\n\nThey posed for photographers as they arrived for the premiere of The Last Duel at the 78th annual Venice International Film Festival.\n\nTheir last red carpet appearance together was almost 20 years ago for the premiere of the film Gigli in 2003.",
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"content": "He was a hero and he helped save many lives that day'<br />Brian Leavey's dad Joseph was a firefighter with the New York Fire Department who died saving people's lives at the World Trade Center.<br /><br />Brian was 16 at the time and would later hear audio recordings from the day of his father talking with his men and going up the South Tower.<br /><br />\"That's how we know the story of his unit. They were at the 78th floor at the time of the collapse of the building. They were one of the only units to make it to the fire floor. It was definitely a relief knowing that they did amazing work that day and I'm just so proud of how brave he was.\"<br /><br />Brian remembers his dad as \"a big kid\" who was always there for his children. \"He loved being a father and taking care of us,\" he said. \"I was very fortunate to have 16 years with him whereas my younger sister only had 10.\"<br /><br />What happened on 9/11?<br />Five lessons learned (or not) since 9/11<br />His father's death made him \"grow up a little faster\" than other kids his age as he wanted to be there for his family and be the man of the house, he recalls.<br /><br />Now a father himself, Brian said one of his regrets is not listening more to his dad when he tried to teach him DIY as a teenager.<br /><br />\"I think about it every day, how I wish he was around to fix things round the house or help me with a renovation. It's one of the things I miss every day.\"<br /><br />Brian now works with the charity Tuesday's Children, where he mentors other fatherless children from 9/11 and other terror attacks.<br /><br />\"I'm trying to turn a negative into a positive,\" he added.",
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"published": "2021-09-11T16:24:41+00:00",
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"content": "He was a hero and he helped save many lives that day'\nBrian Leavey's dad Joseph was a firefighter with the New York Fire Department who died saving people's lives at the World Trade Center.\n\nBrian was 16 at the time and would later hear audio recordings from the day of his father talking with his men and going up the South Tower.\n\n\"That's how we know the story of his unit. They were at the 78th floor at the time of the collapse of the building. They were one of the only units to make it to the fire floor. It was definitely a relief knowing that they did amazing work that day and I'm just so proud of how brave he was.\"\n\nBrian remembers his dad as \"a big kid\" who was always there for his children. \"He loved being a father and taking care of us,\" he said. \"I was very fortunate to have 16 years with him whereas my younger sister only had 10.\"\n\nWhat happened on 9/11?\nFive lessons learned (or not) since 9/11\nHis father's death made him \"grow up a little faster\" than other kids his age as he wanted to be there for his family and be the man of the house, he recalls.\n\nNow a father himself, Brian said one of his regrets is not listening more to his dad when he tried to teach him DIY as a teenager.\n\n\"I think about it every day, how I wish he was around to fix things round the house or help me with a renovation. It's one of the things I miss every day.\"\n\nBrian now works with the charity Tuesday's Children, where he mentors other fatherless children from 9/11 and other terror attacks.\n\n\"I'm trying to turn a negative into a positive,\" he added.",
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