Here's a rundown of the latest viral moments from the Olympics:
Possibly the most fun thing to come out of these Olympics so far is the "Sadly, I Did Not Make the Team" videos, where people share clips of their own athletic FAILS to show why they're not currently competing in Paris.
Read More HERE
Simone Biles was BLOCKED by a former teammate of hers named MyKayla Skinner.
It started earlier this summer when Skinner SHADED all the other girls on the current team BESIDES Biles, saying they had a crappy work ethic. When the team won the GOLD the other day, Simone took an indirect shot at Skinner, with an Instagram post that said, quote, "Lack of talent, lazy, Olympic champions." And now she's blocked.
Read More HERE
Irish rugby star Erin King went full-on SHE-HULK to save teammate Emily Lane from what could have been a nasty fall.
Read More HERE
Athletes are going insane over the chocolate muffins at the Olympic village.
It seems that Ground Zero for this obsession is Norwegian swimmer Henrik Christiansen, who's basically made them his entire personality.
Read More HERE
I don't know who decided that Snoop Dogg is America's official mascot, but I have to admit, it's kind of working. Here he is swimming with Michael Phelps.
All Our Medals Yesterday Were Won by Women
Team USA snagged four more medals at the Olympics yesterday, including another gold.
Swimmer Katie Ledecky broke her own Olympic record in the 1500-meter freestyle. It's the 12th medal of her career, and eighth gold. Both tie all-time, records for American female swimmers.
We also snagged silver in the women's 100-meter freestyle courtesy of Torri Huske. (pronounced Husk) Plus a silver in women's BMX, and a bronze in women's canoeing. So, American women accounted for ALL of Team USA's medals yesterday.
At the end of Day 5, the U.S. led with 30 medals. Then France, 26 . . . China, 19 . . . Great Britain, 17 . . . and Australia, 16.
But the U.S. ended the day still trailing in golds. China led with 9 . . . France and Japan, 8 . . . Australia, 7 . . . Great Britain and South Korea, 6 . . . and the U.S. sat in seventh place with 5.
Read More HERE