The Pros and Cons of Our Burial Rituals

The title of this video at YouTube is "How to Dispose of a Body," which is provocative, but might get you put on a list somewhere. It's not a phrase you want in your search history. But this is about the way humans dispose of the dead when there are no suspicious circumstances.

Most of us are obligated to plan a funeral at some point, even if it's just our own. Burial has always been an option, and for most of history, it's a pretty good plan. Put the body underground, and we don't have to witness its degradation. But we've also developed embalming, coffins, and vaults that aren't biodegradable. In some places, burial is temporary, and bones are recovered after some years so the gravesite can be used again. Setting aside land for the dead is respectful, but can get out of hand when there are too many bodies and too little land. So what's a more sustainable way to, uh, dispose of a the deceased? Hank Green of SciShow lays out several alternatives and compares them for their effects on our future. -via Damn Interesting


Letting the Urgent Drown Out the Important

Modern life has given us a warped sense of time. Or, not so much time, but the importance of time. It's not quite that, either, because time is truly important -it's the only thing we can't make more of. What modern life has done is given us a sense of urgency and impatience that may serve our bosses, but doesn't enrich our lives. We have email, same-day delivery, and time-saving devices to make us more productive and give us more "free time," but then we spend time trying to figure out how to optimize that free time.

There are quite a few examples of how we could look at time in a different way. If you ask an engineering firm to optimize a train ride, they will figure out the fastest way to get to the destination. If you ask the Disney company to optimize the same train route, they will make the train ride so enjoyable that you will much prefer it to driving. It will probably take longer, but which is the best use of one's time? The human brain can adjust to looking at time in a more satisfying way, but the behavior of groups makes this more difficult, as the acceleration of everything makes us too impatient to enjoy anything. Rory Sutherland addresses the question of our changing perception of time in several dimensions in an essay at Behavioral Science that you won't mind spending a few minutes reading. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Isabelle Grosjean)


How Bryan Cranston Became a Badass



Bryan Cranston's Hollywood career goes back further than you know. For twenty years, he was a reliable character actor used for small roles in a variety of TV shows and movies. Yeah, he was "that guy" that people sometimes recognize but don't know the actor's name. Cranston's generic good looks got him picked for guest spots, but it wasn't until the year 2000 that he landed a regular role on the sitcom Malcolm in the Middle, and even then he wasn't the star. However, he made the role his own and became a favorite of the show's fans. Malcolm in the Middle lasted seven seasons, and cemented Cranston as a talented comedic actor.

Then in 2008, we were all shocked that this sitcom dad was suddenly the star of Breaking Bad, playing a methamphetamine manufacturer who evolved into a drug kingpin. Cranston pulled this off perfectly, and proved he's not just a character actor or a comedic actor, he is an actor. Nerdstalgic goes through Bryan Cranston's career and explains how he got the role of a lifetime in Walter White. -via Digg 
 


History's Scariest Drinking Games

Drinking games have been with us for as long as drinking itself has. It only takes a little alcohol to relieve a person of their normal inhibitions and open them up for silliness and competition -and more drinking. Still, there have been some notorious drinking games that led to significant consequences, some of them deadly. There was that time that Alexander the Great staged a drinking competition at a funeral and offered a gold crown to whoever drank the most. The winner drank a stupendous amount, and captured the crown, but then died. And so did most of the finalists. There was also a customary drinking game at Stalin's notorious parties, and another that resulted from a government overthrow- and led to another. An ancient Korean drinking game was like truth or dare, and one option was "Drink from a cup without removing the dirty thing floating in it." Read the stories of five terrifying drinking games from the historical records at Cracked.

(Image credit: Jean-Baptiste de Champaigne)


Vikings Traveled to the Top of the World for Ivory

DNA analysis has changed so much about science, and history, too, now that we can trace individual genes back to their geographic origin. We knew that the Vikings were keen on trading ivory, which was in high demand in Europe. They didn't get it from elephants, but rather walrus tusks. A recent study of the DNA contained in that ivory indicates that some of it came from the very north end of Greenland and upper Canada, on the Arctic Ocean. Norse ships were not previously known to travel that far north, and their New World settlements were mainly in the southwest of Greenland.

Hunting in that area would mean catching a window of only ten weeks when the sea was ice-free, and the trip from southwest Greenland would have taken a month. That leaves only two weeks to catch a year's worth of walruses for their ivory. An alternate theory is that the Norse bought the ivory from indigenous Inuit people, but that would also involve travel as the Inuit did not tend to go south to trade. The discovery speaks to the toughness of Vikings and their ships, and to the extreme value of the ivory they brought back. Read more about this discovery at ScienceAlert.  -via Real Clear Science

(Image credit: Captain Budd Christman, NOAA Corps)


Astronomers Excited for an Imminent Nova

Our night sky will soon have a temporary "new star" when T Coronae Borealis goes nova. T Coronae Borealis, or T Cor Bor for short, is a a white dwarf about 3,000 light years from earth. It sucks up material from red giant star relatively nearby, and explodes into a nova every 80 years. The indications are there that this may happen soon. There are records from previous nova explosions, but the last time it happened, we had no no X-ray or gamma-ray telescopes to record the data.

T Cor Bor is not the only "dead" star to have intermittent novas, but the others either go much longer between novas or are more unpredictable. And there are most likely many that are too far away for us to know about. When the nova happens, the explosion will be as bright to observers on earth as Polaris, the North Star. Stargazers will be able to see it with just our eyes for a few days, or with telescopes for longer. But astronomers will track and collect data from the nova for months. Read a longer explanation of what is expected at Space.com. -via Damn Interesting   

(Image credit: NASA/Conceptual Image Lab/Goddard Space Flight Center)


Mystery Object in the Basement Identified as Something It's Not

Redditor randomlyassigned20 bought a house that's around 100 years old. He found a feature underneath the house that has him stumped, and he posted three pictures. Normally, the folks at the Old Houses subreddit are pretty helpful, and indeed some guessed it was for salt storage, or ice storage, or the ash clean-out for a previous chimney. But the rest of the comment forum leaned into another story altogether.    




There are dozens more of these. Even randomlyassigned20 got into the humor of it. When the same pictures were posted to the Century Homes subreddit, the consensus was that this is an ash clean-out with a coal chute to the right. There's no chimney in that spot, but many old houses, including mine, had more chimneys back when fireplaces were the only heat source, which were later removed when central heating systems were introduced. But even that post still had jokes about Canadian hieroglyphs. Sometimes you just have to roll with the joke.   


Can a Man Charm His Way Into His Girlfriend's Cat's Heart?

Bill Schaumberg is a producer and editor at The Dodo, so you know that animals are important to him. He started dating Kate, who has a cat named Rita. Bonus! Yeah, Bill has plenty of pets of his own, but he still wanted to make friends with Rita. Badly. However, Rita is definitely a one-person cat who is clearly very attached to Kate, and she is set in her ways. That set up a challenge- can Bill persuade Rita to hug on him the way she hugs on Kate? You can't get too pushy in this situation, because cats can see through that. Winning a cat over takes time, dedication, and consistency. But Bill knows that. Watch his adventures in wooing Rita over time. Not only does he eventually make a good impression on Rita, he also gains points with Kate, because women love a man who is good to their pets.   


The Song "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" is Silly and Everywhere

You probably don't recognize the title of the song "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys," but you will certainly recognize it when you hear it. It's an instrumental tune that Kevin MacLeod composed ten years ago to evoke a lighthearted, whimsical, and comical mood. MacLeod has made a name for himself (and quite a bit of money) by composing music and releasing it under a Creative Commons license, meaning anyone can use it for any purpose, as long as they give him attribution. Or you can pay him and use it without attribution.

Since the song is royalty-free, millions of users on YouTube, Instagram, and especially TikTok have selected "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" as the background music for their funny videos. It's far from the most annoying TikTok soundtrack, and you can hear it here. Read how "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" came about and how it's been used all over the internet at NPR. -via Nag on the Lake 

(Image credit: Owuor Jack)


Luxurious Real Estate Listings Give Us the Joy of Feeling Superior

You know how we who aren't rich like to make fun of the dumb ways rich people spend their money? One of the easiest ways to do that is to check out real estate offerings of expensive homes, and we've done that a lot at Neatorama and at Homes and Hues. It's what makes McMansion Hell such a fun site, because money doesn't automatically bestow good taste. Even when an expensive home is perfectly built and appointed, it strikes us as wastefully large and too difficult to care for. Conspicuous consumption is a serious affair, but it also makes you look weird. But there are often ridiculous quirks in these properties that make us feel better about not having the money to embarrass ourselves like that. Ryan George manages to put all our thoughts on such real estate excess into words and shows us pictures of the weird homes designed to suck up money from those who have way too much to care.


In Jurassic World Rebirth, ScarJo Hunts Dinosaurs for Medicine

The seventh film in the Jurassic Park franchise has just wrapped up filming. Jurassic World Rebirth will take up the story of dinosaur de-extinction years after the end of Jurassic World Dominion, and we find that mankind is mostly safe from the escaped dinosaurs because they can't survive outside of equatorial jungles. But the three largest dinosaurs hold the key to a lifesaving drug that will benefit all mankind. So a top secret expedition goes to find them and bring back genetic material. Back in 1993, when Dr. Ian Malcolm said, "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should," he had no clue how that could be turned around to our benefit.  

Jurassic World Rebirth will feature an all-new cast led by Scarlett Johansson, and is expected in theaters on July 2, 2025. Screen Rant has an update on the filming and some speculation about what the movie should be.


There's No Advertising as Powerful as a Smell

One day I was driving up the interstate with the truck windows down and distinctly smelled pizza. I turned and saw a pizza parlor to the right. How does a pizza smell get to a speeding vehicle that far from the frontage road? That small event stuck with me until I ended up eating pizza that night.

Restaurants and other food vendors know the value of smell, and chain restaurants encourage associations with the unique smell recognizable at all their locations. That's why outlets like KFC and Burger King have toyed with perfumes that evoke the smell of their restaurants. It's why Cinnabon and Subway put their ovens near the entry door. It's also why Starbucks had to pull their breakfast sandwiches and redesign them in 2008- because the smell of the sandwiches interfered with the customary smell of the coffee, and customers noticed. Read up on how restaurants customize and maximize the smell of their food to lure customers in at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: Btotanes)


How the Swastika Lost Its Original Meaning

Nike can put their trademarked swoosh alone on a blank page and people will know what it refers to. When a simple symbol becomes tied to your company so well that words aren't needed, that's branding success. One may argue that the Nazi swastika is the best-known branding symbol in the world. When you see one displayed, that tells you more than a thousand words could. So it's a bit jarring to see artworks and photographs that are more than a hundred years old with a swastika displayed proudly. But then you have to remember, that was before the Nazis ruined the swastika. 

The swastika is a symbol that goes back thousands of years, and was used all over the world. It's a bit of graphic design that is simple and clever at the same time. It lends itself well to tiling and was often used in fancy borders on ancient artifacts. It was a symbol of good fortune. So how did the Nazis adopt it for their philosophy of racial superiority? That had to do with the German archaeologist who discovered the ancient city of Troy and made the symbol famous around the world. Read how the ancient swastika was associated with the mythical Aryan race and became Adolf Hitler's brand at Smithsonian. 

(Image credit: Brycesteiner)


The Search for the Giant Squid

The sea holds untold mysteries and legends of monsters from as far back as people have gone to sea. Most of the many sea monster sightings have been explained by drunk and disoriented sailors, and sea monsters that wash up on shore are usually known animals that have been partially eaten or have decayed. But people know what a squid is, because the smaller ones are quite familiar. In 1873, one that was mistaken for a shipwreck grabbed a fishing boat, but was fought off. But later evidence of giant squids was limited to dead specimens and body parts. Giant squids can be 40 feet long! We knew they were there, so why did it take until 2004 to find one alive? Maybe they are hiding from us. The Kraken is smarter than we thought. And that's just the giant squid- we still haven't seen a live colossal squid!  -via Geeks Are Sexy


Gyoza Handbag

Minne, if I understand it correctly, is something like a Japanese version of Etsy. It is definitely a massive online purveyor of handcrafts, such as this lovely handbag made to resemble a gyoza--a steamed dumpling.

It's most inedible at the moment. But since the body is leather, one could slice it up to create smaller, bite-sized gyoza.


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