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Crazyshitcom ((new)) ⚡ Premium


ACTUALIZADO 4 marzo 2026 - 12:16

Crazyshitcom ((new)) ⚡ Premium

Here’s a creative, journalistic-style write-up on — a site whose name alone sparks curiosity, disgust, and fascination in equal measure. Crazyshit.com: A Digital Relic of Unfiltered Chaos In the polished, algorithm-driven corners of today’s internet — where content is sanitized, personalized, and profit-optimized — there exists a raw, bleeding-edge counterpoint. A site that feels less like a social platform and more like a dare. Its name is Crazyshit.com .

So click at your own risk. And maybe don’t eat lunch first. Would you like a content warning or age-restriction disclaimer added to this write-up? crazyshitcom

In a way, it’s a anthropological time capsule. Before dashcams, bodycams, and smartphones turned every event into shareable content, Crazyshit aggregated the weird underbelly of human behavior that mainstream media ignored. Street executions from war zones? Check. A man trying to ride a shopping cart down a flight of stairs? Absolutely. A snake eating a crocodile? Naturally. There’s no sugarcoating it — Crazyshit.com traffics in content that many would call exploitative. Some videos show real injury, death, or trauma. Critics argue the site desensitizes viewers and profits from suffering. Others defend it as a raw, unvarnished mirror of reality — the internet’s equivalent of a morgue or a carnival freak show. Here’s a creative, journalistic-style write-up on — a

Think Faces of Death meets America’s Funniest Home Videos — if the latter were hosted by a nihilist with a dial-up connection. Crazyshit.com doesn’t pretend to be journalism, activism, or art. It’s pure, uncut spectacle. Its anonymous creators and community-driven submissions operate on a simple philosophy: “This happened. Look if you want.” Its name is Crazyshit

The site’s lack of moderation (historically) and minimal warnings mean it’s not for the faint of heart — or the young, the impressionable, or the easily triggered. It’s the digital equivalent of a back-alley VHS tape: once seen, it can’t be unseen. Today, platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and even Reddit aggressively demonetize or delete graphic content. Crazyshit.com remains a stubborn outlier — a grimy, flickering neon sign in a gentrified internet. It has outlived similar shock sites like Rotten.com or StileProject, partly due to its niche loyalists and partly because it never tried to be anything other than what it is: a repository of the bizarre, the brutal, and the breathtakingly stupid. The final verdict Crazyshit.com isn’t for everyone. In fact, it’s not for most people. It’s a relic of an internet that didn’t care about your feelings, your algorithm, or your ad revenue. To visit it is to acknowledge that humanity is simultaneously fascinating and horrifying — often in the same 30-second clip.

Born in the early 2000s, during the internet’s “Wild West” era, Crazyshit.com emerged as a digital shock cabinet. Before Reddit’s r/WTF, before LiveLeak, before TikTok challenges blurred the line between risky and reckless, there was this bare-bones, ad-riddled archive of human extremity. Its mission statement? Simple: collect the strangest, most disturbing, most absurd videos and images from across the globe — and serve them without apology. Visiting the site today feels like stepping into a time capsule wrapped in a biohazard bag. The design is aggressively early-2000s: blocky tables, blinking banners, and thumbnails that promise either a laugh or a therapy bill. Content categories range from “Street Fights” and “Accidents” to “Weird Nature” and “Stupid Criminals.” But the real draws — the infamous ones — include clips of extreme violence, grotesque injuries, bizarre cultural rituals, and moments of shocking human stupidity.

ACTUALIDAD SEGG

La SEGG y la Diputación Provincial de Zamora impulsan un Espacio de Debate sobre los Cuidados y presentan la 11.ª edición del Curso Online Gratuito para Cuidadores

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La Sociedad Española de Geriatría y Gerontología (SEGG), en colaboración con la Diputación Provincial de Zamora, impulsan el Espacio de Debate sobre los Cuidados en el Momento Actual, que tendrá lugar el 25 de febrero de 2026, de 12:00 a 13:45 h, en La Alhóndiga del Pan (Zamora).

ACTUALIDAD SEGG

Deliberar no es opinar

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Para deliberar frente a un problema ético, necesitamos en primer lugar conocer muy bien los hechos, tener la información clara, incluyendo la narrativa de los implicados y no solo la visión del profesional.

ACTUALIDAD SEGG

SEGG y SEPA firman un acuerdo estratégico para impulsar la Salud Bucodental en las personas mayores

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La Sociedad Española de Geriatría y Gerontología (SEGG) y la Fundación SEPA de Periodoncia e Implantes Dentales han firmado el 13 de febrero un acuerdo de cooperación institucional y científica. El acuerdo ha sido rubricado por la presidenta de SEPA, la Dra. Paula Matesanz, y el presidente de la SEGG, el Dr. Francisco José Tarazona.


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Here’s a creative, journalistic-style write-up on — a site whose name alone sparks curiosity, disgust, and fascination in equal measure. Crazyshit.com: A Digital Relic of Unfiltered Chaos In the polished, algorithm-driven corners of today’s internet — where content is sanitized, personalized, and profit-optimized — there exists a raw, bleeding-edge counterpoint. A site that feels less like a social platform and more like a dare. Its name is Crazyshit.com .

So click at your own risk. And maybe don’t eat lunch first. Would you like a content warning or age-restriction disclaimer added to this write-up?

In a way, it’s a anthropological time capsule. Before dashcams, bodycams, and smartphones turned every event into shareable content, Crazyshit aggregated the weird underbelly of human behavior that mainstream media ignored. Street executions from war zones? Check. A man trying to ride a shopping cart down a flight of stairs? Absolutely. A snake eating a crocodile? Naturally. There’s no sugarcoating it — Crazyshit.com traffics in content that many would call exploitative. Some videos show real injury, death, or trauma. Critics argue the site desensitizes viewers and profits from suffering. Others defend it as a raw, unvarnished mirror of reality — the internet’s equivalent of a morgue or a carnival freak show.

Think Faces of Death meets America’s Funniest Home Videos — if the latter were hosted by a nihilist with a dial-up connection. Crazyshit.com doesn’t pretend to be journalism, activism, or art. It’s pure, uncut spectacle. Its anonymous creators and community-driven submissions operate on a simple philosophy: “This happened. Look if you want.”

The site’s lack of moderation (historically) and minimal warnings mean it’s not for the faint of heart — or the young, the impressionable, or the easily triggered. It’s the digital equivalent of a back-alley VHS tape: once seen, it can’t be unseen. Today, platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and even Reddit aggressively demonetize or delete graphic content. Crazyshit.com remains a stubborn outlier — a grimy, flickering neon sign in a gentrified internet. It has outlived similar shock sites like Rotten.com or StileProject, partly due to its niche loyalists and partly because it never tried to be anything other than what it is: a repository of the bizarre, the brutal, and the breathtakingly stupid. The final verdict Crazyshit.com isn’t for everyone. In fact, it’s not for most people. It’s a relic of an internet that didn’t care about your feelings, your algorithm, or your ad revenue. To visit it is to acknowledge that humanity is simultaneously fascinating and horrifying — often in the same 30-second clip.

Born in the early 2000s, during the internet’s “Wild West” era, Crazyshit.com emerged as a digital shock cabinet. Before Reddit’s r/WTF, before LiveLeak, before TikTok challenges blurred the line between risky and reckless, there was this bare-bones, ad-riddled archive of human extremity. Its mission statement? Simple: collect the strangest, most disturbing, most absurd videos and images from across the globe — and serve them without apology. Visiting the site today feels like stepping into a time capsule wrapped in a biohazard bag. The design is aggressively early-2000s: blocky tables, blinking banners, and thumbnails that promise either a laugh or a therapy bill. Content categories range from “Street Fights” and “Accidents” to “Weird Nature” and “Stupid Criminals.” But the real draws — the infamous ones — include clips of extreme violence, grotesque injuries, bizarre cultural rituals, and moments of shocking human stupidity.

ACTUALIDAD SEGG

Erikson y Butler: nuestro grupo desde la perspectiva de dos gigantes

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Cuando Erik Erikson (1902-1994) fijó en los años cincuenta las ocho etapas del desarrollo psicosocial y situó la generatividad en la adultez, periodo caracterizado por la búsqueda del equilibrio entre productividad y estancamiento, por fortuna no creó compartimentos estancos.

ACTUALIDAD SEGG

I Open Call “Age Tech SEGG”

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La Sociedad Española de Geriatría y Gerontología (SEGG) lanza el I Age Tech, una iniciativa pionera diseñada para tender puentes entre la innovación tecnológica y la excelencia en el cuidado de las personas mayores.

Calendario 2026 para socios
Podcast de la SEGG
Webinar de la SEGG
PORTAL DE FORMACIÓN
Cursos on-line de la SEGG
BOLSA DE TRABAJO
Bolsa de trabajo de la SEGG
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Nueva herramienta de Envejecimiento Saludable de la SEEN
Boletín de enfermedades infeccionas y covid de la Fundación de Ciencias de la Salud
crazyshitcom
Una movilización global sin precedentes de la Comunidad Geriátrica y Gerontológica para defender los derechos de los mayores.