A pair of pelicans in California were in a celebratory mood Saturday and decided to crash a graduation ceremony at Pepperdine University.
The birds were caught on video flying around the outdoor event in Malibu and even seen trying to engage the crowd.
One of the long-beaked birds tried to take a seat with family members and guests in the audience but wasn't welcomed and was shooed onto the field, where it seemingly nipped people who were trying to usher it away.
The pelicans eventually waddled off the red carpet and away from the ceremony, which was overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Over 4,000 unpaid teachers demand payment of 16 months arrears from government
10 mins -
I’ve apologised to Gloria Sarfo over flight issues – AMAA Country Director
11 mins -
Ghana nearly lost $9 billion to arbitrary claims in last four years – Attorney General
31 mins -
FWSC responds to CLOGSAG strike declaration, urges return to negotiation
1 hour -
Members contribute to ‘transport’ national team – Volleyball Vice President laments financial struggles
1 hour -
New SHS curriculum provides adaptive learning pathways – EduWatch
1 hour -
Pay NABCO trainees – Mahama challenges Bawumia
1 hour -
Police ‘waiting for court date’ on Erastus’ case is a lie – Samson Anyenini
2 hours -
Sports facilities are better managed by institutions – UG Sports Director on maintenance of Legon stadium
2 hours -
Ghanaian businesses must align vision with strategy to mitigate ESG Risks – KPMG
2 hours -
MTN achieves 30% localisation of Scancom PLC
2 hours -
Attorney-General: Some lawyers sacrifice ethics for ‘cheap’ political gains
3 hours -
Bond market: Volume up by 12.45% to GH¢746m
3 hours -
Cedi records year-to-date loss of nearly 29%; one dollar going for GH¢17.10
3 hours -
‘Our priorities are wrong in Ghana’ – UG Sports Director on sports development
3 hours