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Boy battling brain cancer defies odds, scores touchdown
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"The entire team picked him up, chanting, 'Ben! Ben! Ben!" Holloway said. "I've never seen him so happy or ecstatic. He was on cloud nine." - photo by Jessica Ivins
CHATSWORTH, Ga. Sometimes high school football players get a bad rap, but members of a team in Georgia showed the size of their hearts when they made the dreams of a 5-year-old boy come true.

Ben Holloway always knew he wanted to play football, but his game plan changed dramatically when he was diagnosed with a rare and fatal brain disease last year, according to his Believing 4 Ben GoFundMe page. Over the next year, he underwent three surgeries to fight a golf-ball sized pocket of blood that had formed just behind his left eye.

Doctors gave the Holloways pretty grim odds, but Ben beat them despite all his setbacks, the 5-year-old started kindergarten this month.

"He's going to have checkups to make sure nothing is wrong every six months, but there's a possibility that it could be gone and there will be no need for a fourth surgery," Bens father, Josh Holloway, told ABC News. "He's been doing great. You'd never known anything was ever wrong with him."

But there was still something doctors didnt want him to do, and that was play football. The risk of head trauma is just too great.

Enter the Murray County High School football team. Theyd heard Bens story and decided it was up to them to make his football dreams a reality. So they staged a game in which Ben could safely hit the field without fear of injury to his still-fragile brain.

So in May, when the team surprised Ben with a custom Murray County High jersey, complete with his last name, Ben was shocked.

"He was like a kid at Christmas time," Holloway told CBS News. "It was like Christmas morning for him it really was."

Ben donned a white helmet and set out to score a touchdown, surrounded by his protective teammates. It didnt take long for him to cross the line into the end zone. Scrambling down the field, Ben fell only a couple of times, but each time jumped back up with determination until he reached the goal line and put six points on the scoreboard.

"The entire team picked him up, chanting, 'Ben! Ben! Ben!" Holloway said. "I've never seen him so happy or ecstatic. He was on cloud nine."

Lucky for all of us, the whole thing was caught on video. Its been viewed nearly 500,000 times on the MaxPreps Facebook page since it was originally posted there.

Bens parents have been blown away by the reaction to the video, and for the support theyve received for their little boy.

I was told by a lot of family and friends we had there when they filmed the video that there was not a dry eye in the house when Ben was making his touchdown run, Katie Holloway, Bens mom, told the Dalton Daily Citizen. With him being so little and all these high school-age boys showing him so much love and support, I think that has touched a lot of people.

As for Ben, he still watches the video of his now-famous touchdown every night, according to his parents.
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Have You Seen This? Street musician slays with clarinet
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Better than almost every face-melting guitar or drum solo. - photo by Facebook video screenshot

THE BIG EASY — Yeah, yeah, we all know that New Orleans is stuffed to the gills will incredible musicians.

But knowing that fact and then hearing that fact are two different things. You can step into any number of jazz clubs on any given night on Bourbon Street, and you’ll probably be impressed with virtually every act. Or you can sit at home on your comfy couch and watch this featured video.

In the video, you’ll see a woman who is in the groove. She is swinging hard, and wailing on her clarinet with a practiced expertise that makes it sounds so easy.

From note one you’ll be drawn in; your appreciation will grow with every second, and then your face will melt off when you realize how incredible she really is.

If you’ve never played a woodwind or a brass, you may not know everything that comes with a performance like this. Lung capacity and breath control are huge factors in keeping your notes clear and loud, and hitting those high notes is especially difficult.

So when this woman hits that high note and holds it for several seconds, you know you’re dealing with an exceptional musician. It means she has worked hard for years to develop skill on top of her natural talent, and we get to benefit.

It kinda makes you wonder how we let people get away with mumble rap and autotune when talent like this exists in the world.

I wish this video were longer, and I wish I had more information about this woman, but as it is, we’ll just have to appreciate the little flavor of New Orleans jazz posted by the Facebook group Clarinet Life.

Martha Ostergar is a writer who delights in the ridiculous that internet serves up, which means she's more than grateful that she gets to cruise the web for amazing videos to highlight for your viewing pleasure.
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