Just Kidding Magazine
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Just Kidding is Australia's biggest kids magazine featuring the latest news, stories, competitions, toys, games, books movies and much more!
Just Kidding Magazine
1w ago
Australia is infamous for its massive crocs, painful stingers and hungry sharks and now there’s a crazy sea creature on the list – check ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
1w ago
Space rocks, or meteorites have been pelting our planet for millions of years. Most of those rocks simply burn up in our atmosphere ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
2M ago
Thanks to its bonkers blend of comedy and horror , Beetlejuice became an instant hit with audiences when it was released on March 30 ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
2M ago
Scientists studying the behaviour of marmoset monkeys believe the creatures are able to call one another by name. The monkeys were found ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
4M ago
A lone tree that looks like it’s out for a stroll has been crowned the 2024 Tree of the Year in New Zealand.
This extraordinary Metrosideros robusta, nicknamed The Walking Tree, ‘walked away’ with the award bestowed by the New Zealand Arboricultural Association. Located near a cemetery in South Island, its quirky leg-style trunks immediately conjure Tolkien’s sentient walking Ents in the fantasy trilogy Lord of the Rings
“The Walking Tree was nominated by Bryan Bell, who highlighted its remarkable form and captivating presence,” said the Association in a statement. “With its twin trunks st ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
4M ago
Retired superstar Ash Barty will be reuniting with the grass courts at Wimbledon for the first time since her epic triumph* in 2021 after agreeing to take part in an invitational* doubles match.
It will be the first time the three-time grand slam champion* takes to the courts since announcing her shock retirement in March 2022.
Barty, who since her retirement has got married and become a mother, will play in the exhibition match* on Tuesday, July 9.
The event will include women’s doubles, men’s doubles and mixed doubles. Wimbledon officials made the announcement on social media, declari ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
4M ago
Aphmau, the mega star female gamer and YouTube creator, is known for her love of cats and her collection of adorable MeeMeows!
Now bring home your favorite Aphmau MeeMeows in an even BIGGER form! This Jumbo sized plush is over 16 inches long! Rainbow Cat is here to brighten up everything around you with her vibrant colors! Collect all of Aphmau’s adorable jumbo plush including Rainbow Cat as seen here!
These cute jumbo cat plushies make the most meow-velous cuddle companions with super soft materials, a squishy body and their signature happy faces and big, adorable eyes! An Aphmau MeeMeow ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
6M ago
On weekends, you’ll find Mateo Lange sorting through bottles and cans. Mateo, 15, leads a community recycling program in Indian River, Michigan, his hometown.
Mateo launched the program in 2020. He was 11 and in sixth grade. He was playing baseball with the Northern Michigan Cyclones. The team needed money to travel to tournaments. Mateo pitched a plan.
“There were cans and bottles always thrown around the road,” he tells TIME for Kids. In Michigan, these can be collected. Then they can be redeemed for cash. Mateo started a bottle and can drive. His dad helped. They raised $7,500. “We bu ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
6M ago
A 13-year-old boy has found a rare Lego piece washed up on a beach in south-west England.
Liutauras, from Cornwall, spotted the octopus after two years of searching for Lego pieces that famously fell into the sea thirty years ago, when a cargo ship encountered a storm.
In fact, it's not the only piece Liutauras has gathered from the shore - he's collected almost 800 pieces of the toy!
He regularly goes down to the local beaches with his parents to see what he can find and he's also come across a number of fossils too.
Nearly five million pieces of Lego fell into the sea off the coast ..read more
Just Kidding Magazine
8M ago
Headaches experienced by astronauts in space mostly occur during the first couple of weeks of their mission, a new study finds.
Research in the expanding field of space medicine* has identified many ways in which a microgravity* environment and other factors can meddle with the human body during space missions. A new study has added to the field by showing that astronauts are more likely to experience headaches in space than previously known.
The study involved 24 astronauts from the U.S., European and Japanese space agencies who travelled aboard the International Space Station for up to 26 w ..read more