Golf Course is a Playground for Bobcat Kittens

Arrowhead Golf Club in Littleton, Colorado, is a picturesque course at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. David Townshend and his wife Lynn of David Lynn Photography were there on August 6th shooting video and still photos of a golf tournament. As they approached the 13th hole, they could see some animals on the fairway, and as they got closer, they recognized it was a family of bobcats!

Four bobcat kittens were playing with golf balls, as children do. The couple started shooting while they were far enough away to not disturb the family, and captured these adorable pictures of the kittens having a great time. The pictures were so good that they were featured on a local news report that you can see here. The mother cat was just barely in the rough, keeping a close eye on the action. She's not visible in the cropped Instagram photos, but you can see her at 1:42 in the video.

By the way, there is no penalty if your golf ball is removed from play by an animal. Bobcats don't follow rules, but they have no stake in the outcome, either. You just have to replace your ball.


Four Foods You Love Because of Government Policy

We know that macaroni and cheese became popular in America because of Thomas Jefferson, but you might not know that Kraft got a real break on their boxed macaroni and cheese during World War II rationing. I would suspect the dish's popularity got another break when the government made surplus milk into processed commodity cheese and gave that away for a while. But it's not only the United States government that worked to promote certain foods among Americans. The dish we call Pad Thai is not an ancient recipe; it was created by the Thai government, right about the time it became the Thai government instead of the Siamese government.

You surely want to know about those stories, and you'll find the full versions, plus the government interference that boosted the popularity of risotto and Chinese restaurant food, at Cracked. Not that we really mind, because all those things are delicious.   

(Image credit: Andy Li)


Floating DVD Logo in Butter

Do you remember the bouncing DVD logo? I see it often because I'm still building a DVD collection (physical media can't be disappeared from online sources). If it's been a while since you've seen it, you can step back in time to twenty years ago on this oddly comforting website.

Pablo Rochat, a Spanish conceptual artist, creative director, and Neatorama favorite, captured the essence of the old DVD experience by melting a pat of butter shaped like the DVD logo on a hot frying pan. It's a great source of warm, buttery nostalgia.


A Six-legged Sea Star Makes a Good Parent



Species that employ sexual reproduction have two basic schemes to ensure the survival of their genes. Some spread their gametes widely and indiscriminately to produce great numbers of offspring, like plants and many animals. Others produce fewer offspring, but take care of them to boost their chance of survival. Most sea stars use the former technique, but six-rayed sea stars (Leptasterias hexactis) are different. They are different because this sea star looks like a snowflake, with an extra "leg" that other sea stars lack, and it protects its offspring.  

Six-rayed sea stars don't have to feed their babies, because they've evolved to carry their nutrients with them, like birds with a yolk. But they grow temporary appendages to hang onto their mother until they are big enough to fend for themselves. On the sea floor, where it's eat or be eaten, this gives them a leg up, so to speak, on other sea creatures. Meet this sea star in a video from PBS's Deep Look series. -via Aeon


Claw Machine Infiltrated by Groundhog

Every claw machine has that one prize that's really intriguing, but almost impossible to extract. One machine at Meadows Family Fun Mini Golf in Duncansville, Pennsylvania, had a groundhog inside. Not a plush groundhog, but an adorable young groundhog that wandered about among the pile of plushie toys up for grabs. The critter somehow made his way inside, probably through the retrieval bin, but couldn't figure out how to get out.

Employees of the business called the game warden's office, and State Game Warden Salvadore Zaffuto responded, but he couldn't get the critter out, either. They had to call in the vending machine company, who sent someone to unlock the machine and let the groundhog out. Meanwhile, they had time to take plenty of pictures, some of which which you can see at the state game commission's Facebook post. The groundhog was unharmed. It was released on its own recognizance. -via Boing Boing

(Image credit: Pennsylvania Game Commission-Southcentral Region)


What If We Sent Our Ocean Water to Mars?



In a previous "What If" video, we confronted the theoretical scenario in which the oceans were drained. As an aside in that video, Randall Munroe explained the lack of water in a throwaway manner, saying it was sent to Mars. But that made viewers wonder what that would do to Mars. We know that Mars once had plenty of water, and still may have a significant amount, but the surface is almost all dry. So let's look at that scenario, even though it will never happen. We have enough trouble sending robots to Mars.

See, Mars is very cold, has no atmosphere, and the geology of the surface is very different from that of earth. But if we sent enough salt water, the red planet would start to display continents and islands. Eventually the water would freeze, maybe. Or maybe not. Maybe we could send some atmosphere to Mars, too, while we're in the shipping business. Like we have enough to spare.  -via Laughing Squid


The Word for Forgetting a Word, and Other Words, If You Can Remember Them

Sometimes you search for the word you want, and it's right there on the tip of your tongue, but you can't reach it for some reason. Sometimes you remember the word you want after the conversation has moved on, or maybe you put some other words together so someone will help you. When my daughter asked for a laundry rope, it took me a bit to figure out she wanted a clothesline. If you ask for a wet salad, someone else may step in and suggest soup. But what is the word for when you can't think of a word?

That is "lethologica." The word is made from two Greek terms that mean forget and word. Mental Floss goes over the history of lethologica and what scientists think may cause it. Another term is "lethonomia," which applies specifically to someone's name that you can't recall.

Then there's "loganamnosis," a somewhat related term that I strangely found in another article from a different source just minutes after reading the Mental Floss article. Loganamnosis is a term for when you experience lethologica or lethonomia, and then become so obsessed with remembering the word or name that you can no longer enjoy what you were doing when it happened. Has that ever happened to you?

It's nice to know that there are terms for such forgetting, but no one expects you to remember them all.    

(Image credit: OERDesign


The Traditional Cathartic Rite of Burning Zozobra

Throughout human history, we have vented our anger and frustration over bad luck and injustices by destroying something or someone who has nothing to do with it. That is how the word "scapegoat" came about. The catharsis of heaping all sins on one or a few people figured in human sacrifice, witch burning, public hangings, and mob lynchings, not to mention fiction like The Wicker Man. However, this can be done in a less harmful way, with an effigy burned instead of a person, which could have easily been the case in The Wicker Man.

Every Labor Day weekend, the city of Santa Fe, New Mexico, holds that kind of ritual, when they put all their "glooms," meaning sorrows, anxieties, and negativity, inside a huge effigy called Zozobra. A play is performed to tell the legend of Zozobra, and the effigy is burned with great celebration. The ceremony kicks off the nine-day Fiesta de Santa Fe. You might assume that Zozobra is a figure from an ancient religion, and the burning is a long tradition. On the contrary, the ritual was made up by a Santa Fe artist in 1924, with a mythology to accompany it. It apparently works, as Santa Fe residents and those who travel to the festival see it as a renewal, a chance to destroy all their bad feelings and start afresh. Read how the burning of Zozobra came about, and how it's done every year, at Smithsonian. This year's 100th anniversary burning will be on August 30th, with a 50.5-foot Zozobra.    

(Image credit: Jweiss)


The Ups and Downs of Having a Fever

Someone once explained the old adage "starve a cold, feed a fever" to me as meaning that if a person with a cold doesn't feel like eating, don't make them eat. They need to rest. But if they have a fever, make them warmer if you can. They probably already have the chills despite their temperature, and they seek greater warmth. I've heard other interpretations of the adage that are so varied that it has become meaningless. But why would you stoke the fires of a fever, and how much is too much? It's a delicate balance between feeding a fever and fighting a fever, when your body just wants to kill an infection. Kurzgesagt, an organization that has explained the immune system to us a few times, explains what happens at the cellular level when your body produces a fever. This video ends at 9:40; the rest is advertising and promotional material. 


Cause of Crash: Pilot Hubris

In 1994, Aeroflot Flight 593, a Russian Airlines flight from Moscow to Hong Kong crashed, resulting in the death of all 75 people aboard. There were three pilots aboard since it was such a long haul. When relief pilot Captain Yaroslav Vladimirovich Kudrinsky took over, he brought his two children, ages 12 and 15, into the cockpit and let them each sit in the captain's seat. Kudrinsky led them to believe they were really controlling the plane, but one move led the plane to disengage the automatic pilot. An indicator light came on, but Kudrinsky was used to old Soviet planes that had an audio alarm. The sequence of events as reconstructed after the fact was complicated, but it all came down to plane crash due to showing off.

No matter how good you are at flying a plane, or how long you've been doing it, there are certain risks that you just can't take. There have been several incidents in which pilots pushed their luck by showing off, making a bet, or allowing someone unqualified to do their job, leading to death by plane crash. Read about Aeroflot Flight 593 and four other crashes due to tomfoolery at Amusing Planet.

(Image credit: Anna Zvereva


They Went From Making Tuba Music to Making Pizzas

There are some general rules in business, like 90% of new restaurants fail within a year, only invest where you have experience, and musicians can't get a loan unless they have a record contract. All those rules were upended when Zac Smith and Cheryl Roorda bought a building in Hot Springs, Arkansas, not sure what to do with it. She plays the accordion; he plays an E-flat helicon, an instrument that resembles a tuba. They raised two children by playing gigs wherever they could. The building they found was a wreck, and they spend ten years making it usable. Now it contains a pizza parlor, plus a microbrewery and a radio station, all successful. Their journey involves a lot of hard work, timing, and luck, as evidenced by their story of how they financed the project in 2007.

But this was before the collapse, when they were still going through cemeteries looking for bodies to loan money to. We were able to purchase our home as a tuba-accordion duo, and we were processing the loan, $32,000 on a foreclosure from Fannie Mae, and the strip-mall financier was all, “You know, this would be a lot easier if you took out a $100,000 loan,” and we were like, “What about tuba-accordion duo do you not understand?”

Strangely, the radio station came first, which built goodwill in the community. People will try a new locally-run restaurant, but they won't return unless it is good. Read the heartwarming story of how two musicians founded a quirky but flourishing business at Vox. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: SQZBX Brewery & Pizza Joint)


Squid Game Season 2 Trailer

It has been three years since the Netflix Korean drama Squid Game came out, and the long-awaited second season will finally arrive in December of this year. In line with that, Netflix has released the first teaser trailer for the sequel.

For anyone who watched the show, we all knew that there must be a second season since the last episode had suggested that the story wasn't over yet, especially for Seong Gi-hun, Player 456, who has made it his mission to put an end to the vicious barbaric spectacle of the Squid Game organization.

We don't have many details about what to expect in the second season, however, from the trailer alone, we have been given a clue as to what the initial plot will be. Obviously, for Gi-hun to take down the organization, he needs to once again put his life on the line and enter the game. Everything is up in the air after that.

The trailer also showed some of the new characters' numbers on whom the show will most likely be focusing in the sequel. It has also been revealed that the final season of the show will be released in 2025, so fans won't have to endure a long wait.

(Video credit: Netflix/Youtube)


The Black Dog of Death Comes Calling



In some folklore, the Grim Reaper is a horrendous vision to be dreaded, while in others, he is only terrifying until you get to know him, and then you find out he's a kind and sympathetic escort for the journey we all must take (for example, in Jenny Jinya's comics). In the stop-motion mixed media animation Shuck, the avatar of death is based on the English legend of Black Shuck, a large and terrifying black hellhound with glowing red eyes, or sometimes just one eye in the middle of his head. There are also elements of the legendary church grim, a more benign canine spirit that guards a church.

Emerson New made this video as his graduate film in animation at Edinburgh College of Art in 2023. Shuck won the Best Animation award at the Zepstone International Film Awards in 2023. You can read an interview with New about Shuck here.


Which Countries' Women Keep Their Surnames?

Cleopatra. Hatshepsut. Boudica. Seondeok. Wu Zetian. These are only some of the famous female rulers of antiquity. Their names live on in history, and notice that none of them bear any surname, except for the Chinese empress who carried her family name. That is because the Chinese have a longer history of using family names which started in 2000 BC.

Most other ancient civilizations didn't have surnames or family names as we have them today. In the West, the practice of having surnames started after the Norman Conquest of 1066. The reason was simple. They needed to distinguish between people who had the same given names in the same area.

In the Arab world, patronymics have been used since at least the 6th century AD. Family names indicated a person's tribe, profession, a famous ancestor, or place of origin. In ancient Greece, patronymics were also used, although they are a bit complicated if one does not know the structure of the language.

The Romans also used naming conventions. The nomen gentilicum, or nomen for short, referred to one's gens (family or clan) by patrilineal descent. In the Roman Republic, men usually had three names: the praenomen, the nomen, and the cognomen. Essentially, those refer to the given name, family name, and some kind of title or nickname to distinguish someone, usually describing a military feat that the individual achieved. Women, on the other hand, rarely had a praenomen, only being referred to by their nomen.

Since the Middle ages, we have been using surnames passed down from one generation to the next. In some cultures, when women get married, they get to keep their surnames and simply add their husband's name to their own. In others, married women carry their husband's surname. The map above shows which countries have a majority of women carrying their own surname or their husband's surname.

Many Asian, African, and Latin American countries have majority of their women carrying their own last name, while most Western societies have majority of their women carrying their husband's last name.

The more interesting part of this post are the comments by Redditors, particularly about the Spanish tradition of married women keeping both surnames, which they also passed onto their colonies. There's even further discussion about how the names would be ordered.

Traditionally, the children would take the father's surname first and then their mother's surname. For example, if Juan García Pérez and María López Sánchez have a son named Pedro, then he will be called Pedro García López. However, as many commented, that no longer applies as couples can choose the order of the surnames for their children as long as it will be the same order for all their children.

(Image credit: Lover of Geography Instagram/Reddit)


The Miniature Postcard Printing Press

You may have heard of the Open Press Project, who started a Kickstarter fundraiser five years ago for their Open Etching Press, a small printing press which utilizes intaglio and relief printing techniques so that individuals can create tiny paper prints at home.

That first project was an overwhelming success with 1,485 backers pledging a total of €121,661 out of their original goal of raising €1,000. Seeing the interest and demand of the market for this type of accessible printmaking, the Open Press team has now launched a new campaign.

With the Etching Press, one can print up to a maximum size of 7.5 x 23 cm, or about 3 x 9 inches. But people have been asking whether there was a possibility of having a printing press for larger sizes. So, they came up with a press for postcards.

As explained by Martin Schneider in their Kickstarter video, they had to redesign the structure of the press and use different metal parts as simply making the Etching Press larger wasn't sufficient to scale up the size of what it can print. The Postcard Printing Press uses the same printing techniques as the previous one but can print on a larger surface, with a size of about 4 x 9 inches.

The project launched on August 1 and will continue until August 31. So far, it has 593 backers and amassed pledges amounting to $168,563, which is about eight times the original goal of $20,000. Early bird reward tiers are all gone, and two tiers remain, one for about $256 and another for $290. Check out the Kickstarter campaign here.

(Video credit: Open Press Project/Youtube)


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