How Cloning is Gaining a Foothold in Sports

The first cloned mammal was Dolly the sheep born in 1996, who developed from the complete genome of an another single adult sheep. At the time, we thought cloning animals might come in handy someday for producing beef or something, but only if the costs came way down. Cloning a beloved pet is available for very rich people, and some entities are trying to bring back extinct species by cloning (with little luck so far). But there is one animal that can earn millions of dollars in its lifetime in sports- horses. Yet it's not thoroughbred racing. Neither artificial insemination nor embryo transfer is allowed in thoroughbred breeding, much less cloning. But no such restrictions exist in polo ponies. 

The world's top polo player, Argentina's Adolfo Cambiaso, wanted to preserve the genetic legacy of his best horse Aiken Cura after he suffered a devastating injury and was euthanized. He founded Crestview Genetics, which not only cloned Aiken Cura but also Cambiaso's best mare, the retired but still living Cuartetera. Twenty years later, there are many Cuarteteras and Aiken Curas. Read how that came about at Knowable magazine. -via Metafilter 


Evicting a Bear from Under the House

A homeowner in Altadena, California, had a bear living in the crawl space under their home for more than a month! They had contacted state wildlife officials, but attempts to evict the 550-pound bear were unsuccessful. The bear was causing some damage down there, so they did the prudent thing and shut off the gas line before Christmas. Then they called the Bear League, who does this a lot. They sent Scott and Dave, who aren't afraid of anything. They couldn't lure Yogi out with a pic-a-nic basket, so Scott went down into the crawl space and got behind the bear to chase him out! Dave was ready outside to chase the bear away, and we get to see it because he was wearing a camera on his hat. The bear barely squeezed through the opening, and went back into the woods. No bears nor humans were injured in the operation. -via Laughing Squid 


Klingon Elsa Sings "Let It Go"

Pa’ Emerald City Comic Con Seattle ,Washington-Daq, Frozen muchDaq Elsa ghomDu’ tIvqu’moH. noyDaj qaDtaHbogh qaDmeyDaq, quvHa’be’ bomDaj tIvqu’qu’ bomta’, "yIbuSHa’” pongbogh bom leghlu’ Hoch. Disney bommey — Do’Ha’be’, Shakespeare qaDmey je bommey rur —tlhIngan Hol motlhDaq qaqu’qu’.

Puqpu’wIj puqpu’pu’DI’ Frozen tIvqu’, ’ach tlhIngan Hol ghoj Da’pu’. ’ach nom mu’mey potlh tlhIngan ghojlaHpu’, bomvam mu’mey tIqDaq lanlu’pu’mo’.


The Earliest Use of 20 Slang Words May Surprise You

The whole point of using slang words is to be trendy, a member of the cool group that knows the latest word usage. These word usages may arise from anywhere, but they don't become trendy until a critical mass of the group, say, teenagers or influencers, use them. And considering how long these terms have been around, it could take a hundred years to reach that critical mass, or more likely, they were resurrected from a more ancient time. 

For example, the word "fly" can mean an insect or the act of moving through the sky. But as a slang term meaning fashionable or stylish, you probably didn't hear it much until the 1980s. But it was used in exactly that way to describe a petticoat in a book written in 1753! The list distinguishes the slang term "high" from its normal meaning of elevated, which confused me for a second, because the word "elevated" is now a term used to get around TikTok censorship. But "high" meaning intoxicated by drugs, came into wide use in the 1930s to distinguish it from bring drunk on alcohol. But the term "high" was used for alcohol intoxication going back to 1607. Find out how far back some slang terms can be traced at Mental Floss. 


The Trailer for the New Masters of the Universe

We haven't had a live-action He-Man movie since 1987, but it wasn't for a lack of trying. The new Masters of the Universe has been in development for twenty years, but couldn't get off the ground because of the huge investment required, so the rights have been bandied about like a balloon. But by the power of Grayskull, the movie was finally made. 

This movie is an origin story, in which Prince Adam Glenn/He-Man is exiled as a child to modern-day America for his own safety, but returns to Eternia as an adult to fulfill his destiny and defeat the evil Skeletor (Skeletor, no! Everyone loves Skeletor!) played by Jared Leto (oh, never mind, then). He-Man is played by Nicholas Galitzine, and the movie also features Camila Mendes, Alison Brie, James Purefoy, Kristen Wiig, and Idris Elba. 

In case you're wondering, yes, Mattel still sells Masters of the Universe toys, the 1983 TV show can be found on streaming services, and there was an animated reboot in 2021. Masters of the Universe will open nationwide on June 5, 2026. -via Geeks Are Sexy 


Surviving on a Deserted Island is Far From Just Fiction

Imagine yourself marooned on an uninhabited island, alone, with no one trying to find you. We don't really have to imagine, because that's been a staple of stories from Robinson Crusoe to Gilligan's Island to the upcoming movie Send Help. Those stories were inspired by real instances of people surviving being stranded for a long time. That doesn't mean you can count on survival- that depends on your resourcefulness. Do you have guns, tools, and provisions? Can you figure out what you need and how to get it? And most importantly, is there any fresh water available? We must assume that for every amazing survival story, there are many more cases of people who died and left no trace. 

Some survivors were marooned intentionally, while others were victims of weather or bad planning. Some even returned to a life of solitude after their rescue! Smithsonian has the accounts of seven instances involving 13 people who survived being marooned on a desert island, sometimes for many years. 


How Responsible Are We for Our Morals, or Lack Thereof?

Most of us realize that the world does not revolve around us, and that we have to consider other people. Still, the amount of selfishness and empathy varies widely from person to person. You probably know people who are just plain awful even though they know better. But what if evil and selfishness were all you ever knew, and it was completely normal in your world? You'd still be a complete failure as a person, but was that your fault, or the fault if the way you were taught? In other words, how responsible are people who never learned ethics or morality?  

You'd be hard-pressed to find examples of people who never had the opportunity to develop a moral structure, but that brings up the subject of psychopaths, who have a personality disorder and would like you to think it's not their fault. That subject isn't discussed here. Rather, this is a thought experiment about the responsibility of evil, which philosophers have argued about for thousands of years.  


The Gruesome Spectacle of Souvenir Collectors at Waterloo

The Napoleonic Wars came to an end on June 18, 1815, when a coalition of armies defeated the French Imperial Army. The Battle of Waterloo was fought in what is Belgium today, and around 50,000 men were killed or wounded. Many of those killed were buried quickly in mass graves, but there are strangely few remains today in that field. 

That's because looters descended on the battlefield almost immediately after the carnage. British tourists came in droves to pick up whatever they could find, with an eye to making a profit from battle souvenirs. Bullets, buttons, uniforms, and body parts were all scooped up, leading to an entire industry in trading an exhibiting the remains of the battle. Museums popped up nearby, and locals raked in money from those who weren't fast enough to find their own loot. Read about the commercial aftermath of the Battle of Waterloo at JStor Daily. -via Damn Interesting 

(Image credit: John Heaviside Clark


Mansion at Disney World Has a Star Wars Home Theater

Zillow Gone Wild points us to this mansion located in Disney World (TIL: you can actually live at Disney World) that is decked out for a committed and extremely wealthy Disney fan. The Star Wars-themed home theater gives the impression that you are watching the screen from inside the Millennium Falcon.

Continue reading

First Recorded Instance of a Cow Using a Tool

As Gary Larson predicted in the below 1982 scene from The Far Side, bovine life has now developed the ability to use tools.

Scientific American reports that Veronika, a cow in the town of Nötsch im Gailtal, Austria, has begun using a deck brush to scratch herself. She even adjusts her grip on the brush to scratch different parts of her body and both ends of it for distinct purposes. Veterinary behaviorists report this is the first known tool use by bovine life.

It begins with scratching sticks. It ends with nuclear weapons.

I say that we strike first while we still can.

-via @gdholtby


What Happens to Us if We Lose All Our DNA?

In the latest episode of the What If? series by Randall Munroe and Henry Reich (previously at Neatorama), the question is: "If someone's DNA suddenly vanished, how long would that person last?" While the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell, it's the DNA that tells a cell what to do. You might think that our cells should know what to do by now, and they would continue because of inertia, but that won't go on indefinitely. Each of our body organs have a different task, some more time-sensitive than others. 

As far as we know, this scenario has never happened. But to give an answer, they looked at a few scenarios in which our DNA becomes damaged and can't do its job properly. Those are mushroom poisoning, chemotherapy, and radiation poisoning. The consequences of each are pretty ghastly, even though they don't completely destroy the DNA in each cell. Without DNA, we would certainly be up a creek without a paddle. 

PS: Commenters cited the case of Hisashi Ouchi, which is a tragic and gruesome read. 


The Bizarre World (and Examples) of Mockbusters

Imagine, if you will, seeing a DVD in the dollar bin called Almighty Thor. You might think it's a steal, getting a Marvel movie for just a dollar. And that was the point, somewhat. This movie came out the same year as the first Marvel Thor movie, but Marvel had nothing to do with it. Everyone knows when a new Marvel superhero movie is coming out, so The Asylum rushed to get in the game by spending $200,000 on Almighty Thor, starring Cody Deal, that premiered in the US only one day after Marvel's Thor. The low budget guaranteed it would make a profit, mainly from those who confused it with the MCU movie.  

This is an example of a mockbuster, a film designed to profit from another movie's publicity. Some are better than others, although they are all cheap. Some pass themselves off as parodies. Get a taste of what these movies are like in eight trailers (if you haven't already been fooled into watching some) at Cracked, where you'll find Avengers Grimm, Sinister Squad, Captain Battle: Legacy War, and others, including the most ridiculous of all, The Amazing Bulk


An Honest Trailer for The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Since the extended versions of The Lord of the Rings movies are playing in select theaters to commemorate the silver anniversary of the the beginning of the trilogy (previously at Neatorama), Screen Junkies is taking a cockeyed look at them, one at a time. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers is like many middle trilogy episodes, dark and violent, and downright depressing in places, to build the suspense for a triumphant end in the next film. Yeah, there's plenty of backstabbing and bloody warfare, but also a few new components. There's Gollum, which, thanks to motion capture, comes surprisingly close to your disgusting vision of him from the books. There are the ents, who came from The Wizard of Oz and then went on to give us Groot. And there's a thirsty focus on Aragorn, because the first movie was pretty ambiguous about making him the hero. But Saruman gets the best joke in this Honest Trailer. 


The Big Magnetic Mountain at the North Pole

At the top of the world, there are four islands. They would form a donut, but four mighty rivers dividing these islands flow from the oceans into a sea between them, then form a whirlpool as the waters rush down into the earth. A "polar vortex," if you will. In the middle of the sea, a giant magnetic rock the size of a mountain stands. Its magnetic force pulls the needles of every compass on earth toward it, defining "north." At least that's what people thought before the North Pole was actually explored. 

You can see all this in the map above, produced by esteemed cartographer Gerhard Mercator for his groundbreaking atlas published in 1595. The layout came from a 14th-century book that has been lost, but was referred to in other works. The lore of the North Pole included inhabitants of at least one of the four islands. This account of the Arctic was accepted in the Middle Ages because who was to prove otherwise? This notion was gradually changed as explorers mapped islands in the Arctic, until it was completely dropped. Read about the early concept of the North Pole at Amusing Planet. 


The Impressive Intelligence of the Goffin's Cockatoo

You might think of birds as bird brained, but there are so many different types of bird that you cannot compare the smarts of, say, a chicken with a crow. Crows are pretty intelligent, and can use tools. But a particular bird of the species Cacatua goffiniana, also known as Goffin's cockatoo, pulled scientists into studying them. That was Figaro, who was clever enough to use a tool to get what he wanted. That put Figaro into a lab with other Goffin's cockatoos to see how good they are at problem-solving. The increasingly difficult tasks they solved surely made these birds regret the day they showed off in front of a human. Still, they proved they can figure out how to get what they want, up to a point. I was waiting for the cockatoos to attack the researchers for the ridiculous treasure hunts they forced on the birds. The subject matter is so wholesome that Ze Frank had to stretch to get any prurient jokes in here, but he managed it occasionally. There's a 70-second skippable ad at 4:30.  


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