Yep he sure is pretty

But he can be a downright c%#t a lot of the time!!! He's bitten me pretty badly a few times

Like I said, they're like an ADHD child, and they are
very difficult to discipline! They are pretty intent on doing whatever they want, and if you get in the way, you're pretty likely to get a nip.
Back when I was a vet nurse, one of our clients brought him in to our clinic. He'd fallen out of the nest and the mama bird had taken off. So I hand-reared him from when he was about 5 days old. He didn't even have any coloured feathers yet so I didn't even know what species he was! But after about a week he started to get these little electric blue feathers on his head, so I knew he was a rainbow lori
Rainbow lorikeets are EVERYWHERE in the wild here in Australia! And a lot of people breed them too of course because they're reasonably popular pets/aviary birds. There are a few massive flocks of them in my suburb, and we can always hear baby loris in the trees in spring and throughout summer

The babies have a very distinctive sound, but perhaps it just stands out to me more because I hand-raised one, so that little baby lori sound is permanently imprinted on my brain hahaha.
Loris aren't as big as African Greys. Buzz is about 23cm from head to the tip of his tail (and he's small for a rainbow lori).
Scaly-breasted lorikeets (which are just as abundant in the wild as the rainbows) are a bit smaller, around 20-25cm long.
I always find it funny that I refer to Buzz as a "he", because in reality we have NO idea if he's male or female! Male and female rainbow lorikeets are
exactly the same in appearance. The only way you can find out the sex is by x-raying their pelvic bones, or by doing a DNA test on a feather. So for all we know, Buzz could be a Buzzette. Although he's never laid an egg...I dunno.