"The thing about this is that now there’s a hunter somewhere up here whose goal above Newport Cigarettes Shop all others is to seek out this animal for nothing more than his antlers," another wrote.
Some commenters even expressed doubt about the validity of photos, accusing Lindberg of photoshopping. The 75-year-old stood his ground though, telling the Detroit Free Press he spent hours watching it over the weekend.
"One more shot of three antlers ... just to dispel any photoshop rumors," Lindberg wrote in a second post sharing the remarkable buck.
It's not the first time this week that a striking animal photo has taken the internet by storm. A "unicorn" puppy with a tail growing from its head has also recently gone viral, after an animal shelter posted adorable photos of the unusual dog. Few phones were as iconic and as ubiquitous as the original Motorola RAZR. Celebs used them constantly, fashion houses cooked up designer mashups, and it wasn't long before friends, family members and co-workers all started carrying them, too. The RAZR was, in other words, an absolute phenomenon, and now it's back.
As countless reports and leaks have confirmed, though, it isn't the RAZR you grew up with. This new version, which will sell for $1,500 when it launches on Verizon next month, is Motorola's first foldable smartphone, and unlike any other foldable we've played with this year. It doesn't unfold into a small tablet. It doesn't pack loads of cameras or flagship components. It is, by Motorola's admission, a "design-first" kind of phone. That might sound concerning to some, and after a bit of hands-on time in sunny Los Angeles, people who demand peak smartphone performance or superior battery life might be a little disappointed.
That's OK, though. Motorola's priority here was to build the kind of foldable device that regular people would Cheap Newport 100s cigarettes want to use, and despite some compromises, I think the company might be onto something.