Parish Seafood Wholesale processes 4 million pounds of crawfish every year.Founder Madison McIntyre told Business Insider the company made $500,000 in 2022.Crawfish generate $300 million a year for Louisiana's economy. Thanks for signing up!
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Louisiana produces 90% of the crawfish found in the United States. Most farmed crawfish come from rice fields in one 35-square-mile area near Welsh, Louisiana.
Updated Insider has gathered a list of the most notable siblings in Hollywood. From Maggie and Jake Gyllenhaal to Jurnee and Jussie Smollett, see what these famous brother-duos are up to now. Visit Insider's homepage for more stories. The famous brother and sister duos of Hollywood prove that, in some cases, talent does run in the family. Many of these celebrity siblings have starred alongside each other in movies and TV shows, but whether on or off the screen, these famous pairs will always have a place in our hearts.
The feet of Amillia Taylor, born in Miami after just 22 weeks in the womb. Photo: Baptist Health South/GettyThe feet of Amillia Taylor, born in Miami after just 22 weeks in the womb. Photo: Baptist Health South/GettyHealthAgainst all oddsAmillia Taylor shouldn't be alive. She was born at less than 22 weeks - in the US, where babies aren't considered 'viable' until 23 weeks. But her desperate mother lied to doctors about how far gone she was, and Amillia is now the most premature baby to have ever survived.
Redeem now [UPDATE 01/11/15: Team Bieber denies the "un-retouched" images are real and BreatheHeavy.com, which originally posted the photos, has issued a retraction.]
Teenage girls have been going crazy for the new Calvin Klein ad campaign, which features a buff Justin Bieber posing in only his boxer shorts.
But it turns out Biebs might not be quite as sculptured as the ads would indicate.
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Hiding in a junk-store box, unseen for 82 years. Historians, journalists astounded! Photo: © Weegee/International Center of Photography Photo: © Weegee/International Center of Photography In 1970, an artist named David Young bought a box of 1930s news photos at a secondhand store in Philadelphia. He just liked the look of them, he says now, and he stuck a couple on the wall of his studio with masking tape.