Uncommon Knowledge
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
A puzzle factory’s exhibit has gained attention for its unique tribute to a common problem—what happens when your pet gets hold of a puzzle piece?
In a special section of the Liberty Puzzle Factory in Boulder, Colorado, sits an infamous “wall of shame” filled with pictures of pets who have committed the ultimate crime in the eyes of puzzle lovers everywhere—consuming or mutilating precious puzzle pieces.
Elle, a puzzle fan from Austin, Texas, was delighted by the exhibit during a visit, capturing a picture and sharing it on Reddit, where thousands of people have subsequently been left in stitches.
“I thought it was hilarious and spent a good amount of time looking at it. I received permission to snap a picture. I wanted to share it with Reddit because I thought it would bring joy to anyone who saw it,” Elle told Newsweek.
Established in 2005, Liberty Puzzles creates wooden jigsaw puzzles inspired by a history of family memories enjoying puzzles together. Newsweek reached out to Liberty Puzzles via email.
u/hybridginger/ Reddit
To combat the aftermath of puzzle piece plundering, Liberty Puzzle Factory has devised a novel approach. Instead of the traditional payment for replacement pieces, the factory encourages affected customers to send in a snapshot of their puzzle-pilfering pet. It’s a whimsical exchange, turning the calamity into a heartwarming display of pet antics.
The Wall of Shame boasts a montage of mischievous pets caught in the act. Elle revealed it was “mostly dogs,” although she did notice one fish.
“The workers did not know the story of the goldfish, unfortunately, because it’s been around longer than most of them have worked there,” Elle said.
After sharing a picture of the wall on Reddit’s r/mildlyinteresting subreddit, it gained more than 29,000 upvotes and hundreds of comments.
One commenter called it “criminally adorable,” while another suggested: “They should make a puzzle of the wall of shame.”
It wasn’t just animals on the wall either, other examples of things that appeared to have maimed a puzzle piece were an automatic vacuum, a washer and even Game of Thrones character Cersei, for reasons unknown.
“While I figured I would get some reaction to it, I did not expect this level of attention. I’m glad to bring so many people joy and, in doing so, shine a light on a small business,” Elle said. “The Liberty Puzzle Factory deserves all the recognition it can get. The puzzles are works of art.”
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
An acclaimed Colorado Buffaloes coach is back in the Pac-12 Conference.
Coach Mike MacIntyre, who led the Colorado Buffaloes for nearly six seasons from 2013 to 2018, has landed his next job. The Oregon State Beavers hired him on Thursday as their next defensive coordinator.
After a 10-27 record in his first three years at Colorado, MacIntyre was named consensus Coach of the Year in 2016 for overseeing the program’s best season since 2001. The Buffs went 10-4, won the Pac-12 South and were ranked as high as No. 8 for the College Football Playoff.
It included a 41-38 win over Oregon, Colorado’s only triumph over the Ducks during its time in the Pac-12. Quarterbacks Sefo Liufau and Steven Montez each made significant contributions, while running back Phillip Lindsey, cornerback Chidobie Awuzie and 14 others earned all-conference honors.
While they were blown out in both the ensuing Pac-12 Championship and Alamo Bowl, MacIntyre’s work was hailed, and a lengthy contract extension was awarded.
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However, it wasn’t without controversy. In 2017, the university reprimanded him, along with athletic director Rick George and chancellor Phil DiStefano, for mishandling domestic abuse allegations against then-secondary coach Joe Tumpkin by an ex-girlfriend.
Following the punishment, MacIntyre released a statement claiming he was following school protocol and prioritizing the victim’s safety. His contract approval stalled under heavy scrutiny, a sign of things to come.
Colorado went 5-7 in 2017, then won its first five games and reached the AP poll before a six-game losing streak. MacIntyre was fired, ending his 30-44 tenure with the Buffaloes.
Even with one notable season, he remains one of the most accomplished bosses in recent Colorado history. Coach Deion Sanders took over in 2022 after the Buffs’ failed hires of Mel Tucker and Karl Dorrell.
Instability has shrouded MacIntyre’s post-Boulder world. He spent a season as defensive coordinator at Ole Miss, where he was nominated for the Broyles Award. He was the Rebels’ interim head coach before the hiring of Lane Kiffin, then made another defensive coordinator pit spot at Memphis.
MacIntyre returned to the head coaching ranks in 2022 with Florida International, but it quickly unraveled. The Panthers went 4-8 for three straight seasons until he was hired.
In a 2024 interview with The Athletic, former FIU linebacker Reggie Peterson alleged that MacIntyre threw a chair that hit a player, kicked chairs and knocked over a projector during halftime of a game two years prior. Peterson also accused MacIntyre of disparaging him and running a “Ponzi scheme.”
This past season, MacIntyre worked as a senior defensive analyst at Mississippi State. He now takes a top spot at Oregon State under first-year head coach Jamarcus Shephard, Alabama’s former offensive coordinator.
Before coaching Colorado, MacIntyre spent over two decades coaching around the country, including five seasons guiding secondaries in the NFL. He started as a graduate assistant at Georgia, earned his first Division I coordinating job in 1997 at Temple and oversaw San Jose State for three years before the Buffs.
His head-coaching track record is murky, but MacIntyre is a respected defensive mind who led Colorado to some of its highest peaks this century. He’s off to Corvallis to wrangle a revamped Pac-12, as well as two Big 12 teams next season, Houston and Texas Tech.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — A Colorado funeral home owner who stashed 189 decomposing bodies in a building over four years and gave grieving families fake ashes will be sentenced Friday on corpse abuse charges.
Jon Hallford owned Return to Nature Funeral Home in Colorado Springs with his then-wife Carie. They pleaded guilty in December to nearly 200 counts of corpse abuse under an agreement with prosecutors.
Jon Hallford faces between 30 and 50 years in prison. Carie Hallford faces 25 to 35 years in prison at sentencing on April 24.
The Hallfords stored the bodies in a building in the small town of Penrose, south of Colorado Springs, from 2019 until 2023, when investigators responding to reports of a stench from the building discovered the corpses.
Bodies were found throughout the building, some stacked on top of each other, with swarms of bugs and decomposition fluid covering the floors, investigators said. The remains — including adults, infants and fetuses — were stored at room temperature. Investigators believe the Hallfords gave families dry concrete that mimicked ashes.
The bodies were identified over months with fingerprints, DNA and other methods.
Families learned the ashes they had been given, and then spread or kept at home, weren’t actually their loved ones’ remains. Many said it undid their grieving process, others had nightmares and struggled with guilt that they let their relatives down.
The funeral home owners also pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges after prosecutors said they cheated the government out of nearly $900,000 in pandemic-era small business aid.
Jon Hallford was sentenced to 20 years in prison in that case. He told the judge he opened Return to Nature to make a positive impact in people’s lives, “then everything got completely out of control, especially me.”
“I still hate myself for what I’ve done,” he said at his sentencing last June.
Carie Hallford’s federal sentencing is set for March 16.
Attorneys for the Hallfords did not respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press.
During the years they were stashing bodies, the Hallfords spent lavishly, according to court documents. That included purchasing a GMC Yukon and an Infiniti worth over $120,000 combined, along with $31,000 in cryptocurrency, luxury items from stores like Gucci and Tiffany & Co., and laser body sculpting.
One of the recovered bodies was that of a former Army sergeant first class who was thought to have been buried at a veterans’ cemetery, said FBI agent Andrew Cohen.
When investigators exhumed the wooden casket at the cemetery, they found the remains of a person of a different gender inside, he said. The veteran, who was not identified in court, was later given a funeral with full military honors at Pikes Peak National Cemetery, he said.
The corpse abuse revelations spurred changes to Colorado’s lax funeral home regulations.
The AP previously reported that the Hallfords missed tax payments, were evicted from one of their properties and were sued for unpaid bills, according to public records and interviews with people who worked with them.
In a rare decision, state District Judge Eric Bentley last year rejected previous plea agreements between the Hallfords and prosecutors that called for up to 20 years in prison. Family members of the deceased said the agreements were too lenient.
Whether it’s a long flight to an Austrian glacier for an extended training camp or a quick commute to Copper Mountain, Ollie Martin — from the time he was a kid — has always passed the travel time fiddling around with a miniature snowboard figurine.
Twisting. Flipping. Creating.
The toy wasn’t about to get left behind for the Olympics.
“My mom made me bring it,” Martin said at a press conference in Livigno, Italy on Tuesday. “Honestly that toy was really helpful for me. I could use it to visualize. I was able to come up with some tricks with that toy. Sounds silly, but it was actually really helpful.”
The trailblazing Martin is one of three Colorado snowboarders with medal potential in the slopestyle events beginning this week in Milano Cortina. The 17-year-old — who won two world championship bronze medals last March — joins 2018 slopestyle gold medalist Red Gerard of Silverthorne as well as Aspen’s Jake Canter and Oregon native Sean FitzSimons on the U.S. big air and slopestyle squad. While Gerard is the household name on that list, even he can’t help but look up to Martin, who became the youngest athlete to win a World Cup slopestyle event in Calgary last winter.
“Ollie is his own beast — I look up to him,” said Gerard, who was also on the Snow Rodeo podium in Canada on Feb. 22, 2025. “I mean, I look at what Ollie does and I’m like, ‘Yo how do I do that — that’s insane.’ I think it’s a friendly push off each other.”
Martin is the youngest rider to ever land a 2160 and the only athlete to stomp both a frontside and backside 2160. At the Steamboat Springs big air world cup, he uncorked the first cab 16 pullback to claim his second-career podium.
“I had that idea this spring and went to Austria to try it on the air bag. Got it a few times pretty consistent so I felt pretty comfortable to do it on snow,” Martin said. “Steamboat was just a perfect jump — pretty poppy, a lot of air time and an impactful landing, which is actually pretty good for that trick. So, (I) felt comfortable to do it there and it paid off.”
Gerard, who burst onto the scene when he won the slopestyle gold in 2018 but missed the medals in Beijing four years later, said he’s trying to reclaim his teenage magic in his third Games.

“I think I’m just trying to get back to that 17-year-old self. I know what it takes, I feel like I’m riding the best I ever have in a lot of ways,” he said. “I’m just kind of going back to doing the tricks I know how to do and not worrying about the judges. Literally just trying to land runs and go from there.”
The 25-year-old prequalified for the 2026 Games by finishing as the top American — and second overall — in the World Snowboard Points List. That meant he didn’t have to stress while the rest of the team sorted itself out at qualification events in December and January.
“It was cool to see how it all panned out and our whole slope team is so good,” Gerard said. “Could have been anyone up here, but I’m happy to be up here with these four guys, and yeah, we’ll bring home some medals.”
Jake Canter qualified for the team by winning the U.S. Grand Prix in Aspen last month. On his winning run, the 22-year-old opened with a frontside 50/50 to lipslide 270, followed that up with a backside 270 on the second rail section and went right to a switch backside 1260 nosegrab. He closed with a backside 1980 melon and a switch noseslide 630 for a score of 85.16 to secure his first World Cup win and second-career podium.
“It was amazing. I spent so much time as a kid riding at Snowmass, so to be able to do it there in front of old coaches and friends and family — it was super special,” Canter said.

The Colorado trio will compete in the big air qualifier beginning on Thursday; the first of three runs starts at 11:30 a.m. MST, with the final slated for Feb. 7. The men’s slopestyle qualification and finals are Feb. 16 and 18, respectively.
While Martin’s strengths are obvious, his perceived weaknesses aren’t. The Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy senior said he realized he doesn’t always thrive when the lights are brightest and his nerves are highest.
“For the last two years, I’ve been putting excess pressure on myself at smaller, less important comps,” he said. “That’s really just to prepare myself for the Olympics because there will be a lot more pressure.”
Knowing what’s at stake over the next two weeks, Canter echoed Billie Jean King’s mantra, stating, “pressure is a privilege.”
“(I’m) so lucky to be in this position, to be here, represent the United States, to be able to snowboard and hopefully inspire others to snowboard,” he said. “So, that in and of itself is a win to me, but at the same time, yeah, I want to do the best run I possibly can and I would love to win.”

Gerard has won before. But he isn’t about to let past results — or the expectations of future ones — impact his mindset.
“I never really go into a contest like, ‘oh I want to get on the podium.’ It’s like, ‘I want to do that run that I came here to do and if that ends on the podium, great,’” he said. “I’m here to snowboard, do that run, and hopefully it’s good.”
For Martin, the goal is to be creative, stay safe and perform his best. To some degree, just being in Milano is already victory enough.
“It’s been an amazing last year and a half,” he said. “Everything I’ve ever wanted as a kid is coming to fruition.”
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