A Musician Plays "The Lick" on 92 Different Instruments

"The Lick" is a musical meme consisting of 7 notes. It appears frequently in jazz as a sort of stock phrase that musicians play easily and naturally.

As a professional musician, Luke Pickman can, of course, play it. As a collector of musical instruments, he has a lot of performance options. In this video, he plays the lick on 92 different (sometimes very different) instruments.

Yes, he plays the tenor sax, the piano, and the cello. But he also pulls out some more unusual choices, including castanets, a conch shell, and mayonaise.

Pickman personally owns 90 of the instruments. I'll assume that the mayonaise is one of them.

-via Laughing Squid


Father and Son Duet



Swedish musician Seth Everman (previously at Neatorama) does a duet with his father, who is also a musician. That's a really nice, wholesome thing to do. I think we are supposed to be surprised that a 70-year-old musician segues into Metallica and really shreds, but you know who else is in their 70s? Jimmy Page is 78, Keith Richards is 78, Eric Clapton is 77, Jeff Beck is 78, David Gilmour is 76, Brian May is 75... you get the idea. But Everman the elder is also an artist, recreating the scene on canvas during the video! But what I found most surprising is in the flashbacks at the end of the video. Imagine giving a three-year-old a drum kit! -via Digg


That Time the US Military Lost an Armed Nuke Forever

During the Cold War, the US wanted to be able to drop nuclear bombs on the Soviet Union with only 15 minutes' notice. Between 1960 and 1968, that meant keeping pilots in the air with nukes aboard around the clock, taking off from US bases around the world. Yes, there were accidents, and nukes sometimes went missing. The most terrifying of those accidents occurred in 1965 on the USS Ticonderoga aircraft carrier 80 miles off the coast of Japan. A Douglas A-4E Skyhawk aircraft rolled off the side of the carrier into the ocean, and neither the plane nor the pilot was ever seen again. Only his helmet was recovered. That plane not only carried a nuclear bomb, but it was armed and ready to go.

That wasn't the only mishap. Another plane carrying four bombs got the US nuclear program banned from Spain. A plane with nukes was abandoned over Greenland in 1968. By then, we had submarines that could launch a nuclear missile, and ICBM silos as well, but the real reason the 24/7 airborne nukes were abandoned was because there were too many things going wrong. Read about this program and the crashes the military doesn't like to talk about at Vice.  -via Damn Interesting

(Image credit: Lt.JG Nelson, U.S. Navy)


The Big-Footed Jacana

The African jacana is a bird with long skinny feet and... how many of them? This image appeared at the no context subreddit,  so there's no explanation for a bird with what appears to be eight legs. Maybe you can guess. Or you can just watch a video about these birds.



Okay, so there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for all those legs. It's even adorable. But before you get to it, you have to marvel at these tiny chicks with enormous feet bearing toes and claws that are as long as their bodies. They act almost like snowshoes for walking around on water lilies. Our earth is an amazing place. -via TYWKIWDBI 


Where Australia's Invasive Rabbits Came From

English people who voluntarily settled in Australia wanted to bring a bit of their homeland with them. They had no clue what damage that could do to a continent that had been isolated for millions of years. In 1859, Thomas Austin received a Christmas gift in a shipment from his brother: two dozen rabbits. They were not the first British rabbits to be shipped to Australia by a long shot. But they were the ones who multiplied until Australia was overrun by a billion rabbits that ate every plant in sight and crowded out native animals.

Even though rabbits had been transferred to Australia at least 90 times before Austin's arrived, it was assumed that his rabbits were the ones that became the invasive hoard. That assumption was due to the timing and the estimated epicenter of the catastrophe. But now there is genetic proof. Researchers studied the genes of 187 rabbits caught between 1865 and 2018, in Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, Great Britain, and France. The results of the study determined that the rabbits of Australia were indeed descended from just five female rabbits on Austin's property. While Australia's rabbits are down to around 200 million today, they still cause enormous damage to the ecosystem and agriculture alike. Read about the study of the invasive rabbits of Australia at Smithsonian.

(Image credit: CSIRO)


If English Was Spoken Like German

Or, to put another way, if Yoda was from Bavaria instead of spending his years in Dagobah.

Nick Alfieri is an American football player who plays for Schwäbisch Hall Unicorns in a German football league. He's also a filmmaker who has produced a documentary about how he and a few other Americans came to a small town in Germany to build a great football team.

Alfieri has gotten to know Germany and speak German. Although his native English language is a Germanic language, there are notable differences between it and modern German. In this video, he converses with his girlfriend in an English that uses conventional German word order. It's intelligible, but weird.

-via Boing Boing


A True Fan Gets a Surprise

The Seattle Mariners celebrated "Ichiro Weekend" in honor of retired outfielder Ichiro Suzuki, who was inducted into the team's Hall of Fame Saturday night. To throw out the first pitch for Friday's game, the team selected Mariners fan Iris Skinner, who came to be known as "Ichiro Girl" in 2010 after the cameras caught her excited reaction to a brush with celebrity when Ichiro retrieved a ball right in front of her. Yeah, you'll see that clip in this video. Skinner was in for a surprise in her moment of glory when she realized she'd be pitching to Ichiro himself, who donned his Mariners uniform for the occasion. Her adorable enthusiasm will put a smile on your face for sure. -via Fark


The Architecture that Protects Himalayan Homes from Earthquakes



If you've ever studied plate tectonics, you know that the Himalayan Mountains were formed when the Indian plate crashed into the Eurasian plate. That area is still geologically active, with lots of earthquakes. But people learned how to build houses that could withstand the tremors. An ancient building technique called kath kuni ("wooden corner") combines layers of stone and alternating layers of deodar wood, with the wood beams interlocking at the corners. The stone provides strength, and the wood provides flexibility to survive an earthquake.



But there is more to the kath kuni buildings. The upper floors are often wider than the first floor. The first floor is a shelter for livestock, which provide heat that rises to the upper floors where people live. The walls are double thickness, and a slate roof holds the whole thing together. The problem is that deodar wood is expensive and hard to get for historical reasons, and new homes in the Himalayas are built with concrete. Earthquakes can destroy concrete homes, but the kath kuni homes of the Indian state Himachal Pradesh can stand for hundreds of years. Read about kath kuni and see more spectacular examples at BBC Travel.  -via Damn Interesting


30+ Cosplays from the 2022 San Diego Comic Con

Comic Con finally returned this year after two years of cancellations due to covid. While attendance was lower and the vibe was a little more relaxed than usual, the con certainly wasn't short on cosplayers who were thrilled to be back to one of their favorite hobbies.

All images by Zeon Santos or myself. While the con was a whole month ago, due to personal reasons, we couldn't get the images up until now. Hope you all enjoy them!

This guy was so great, when I asked him if I could get a picture, he yelled "why are you taking pictures of me when you should be out there taking pictures of Spider-Man?"

While I didn't happen to get any great pictures of Spider-Man, Zeon happened to catch this gorgeous Elektra in action.

When it comes to spot-on superhero cosplays though, it was hard to beat this Captain America posed right beside a bust of the real thing.

Then again, sometimes originality trumps authenticity -and it's hard not to love this chancla-throwing Wonder Woman.

I wonder how she would get along with this chimichanga-loving Deadpool.

Continue reading

The Large Mobile Shaker Creates Earthquakes on Purpose



The University of Texas Austin has a truck that's built to shake the ground under it. It's officially titled the Large Mobile Shaker, but those who use it call it the T-Rex, because its effects may remind you of the earth-shaking footsteps of the T-rex in Jurassic Park. Or that annoying kid who wants to show off his subwoofers. That's cool, but why would you want to shake the ground? It's for research and testing. The research is on what parts of the country could be subject to what kind of damage in an earthquake, and the testing is for projects like construction. Builders need to know if there are soft spots and flaws deep in the ground underneath before they build something massive, like a power plant. Tom Scott talks to Professor Ken Stokoe about they way they use the Large Mobile Shaker. You can read more about this machine at the UT Austin NHERI Experimental Facility.


NASA Launches for the Moon Monday Friday

The Artemis 1 is set to launch Monday morning from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. This is the first launch of the Artemis mission that will send astronauts back to the moon for the first time in almost 50 years. Artemis 1 is an unmanned flight that will test the Orion spacecraft and NASA's new launch system. The spacecraft will travel 280,000 miles from earth, looping around the moon before returning home. The entire trip will take four to six weeks and cover 1.3 million miles. Tomorrow's launch is set for 8:33 AM. Read more about the mission at Jalopnik.
(Image credit: NASA)

UPDATE: The Artemis launch has been scrubbed due to an issue with one of the four rocket engines, and has been tentatively rescheduled for Friday, September 2.


When Big Hair Was the Biggest Ever

The teased bouffants of the 1950s and the Aquanet curls of the 1980s couldn't hold a candle to these hairstyles! Besides, holding a candle to any such hairdo is a bad idea. For a short time in the 1770s, big hair was bigger than ever. Ladies in England copied ladies in France, and wore elaborate constructions on their heads that saw their hair lifted high and decorated with jewelry, toys, flowers, and whatever could contribute to the look. The style even traveled to America, where it was only used for special occasions by wealthy city dwellers because Americans were pretty busy in the 1770s. How high were those hairdos? We aren't sure, because the artistic depictions of them tended to be caricatures that greatly exaggerated the trend. But those caricatures are scathing and fun to see. The image below not only satirizes the enormous hair, but also the British conflict with the American colonies, as the hairdo depicts the British evacuation of Boston.



The styling of these hair constructions was lampooned, too. Stylists had to climb ladders or hang from ropes to reach the hair they were working on! Big hair wasn't limited to women, either, as men known as macaronis adopted bouffant styles, too. Enjoy a gallery of 36 caricatures of the big hair trend of the 1770s at Flashbak. -via Nag on the Lake


A Celestial Dessert for the Apollo 11 Astronauts

On August 13, 1969, the White House held the largest state dinner ever at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles. The 1440 guests included movie stars, politicians, scientists, and diplomats. The guests of honor were Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins, who had just returned from the Apollo 11 mission a couple of weeks before. President Nixon presented the three astronauts with the Medal of Freedom during the dinner, and the whole thing was televised. Outside, war protesters chanted.

The hotel kitchen staff, led by chef Walter Roth, cooked so much food that the sprinklers went off, but they still produced an exceptional meal personally approved by Nixon. He had demanded that a fancy new dessert be created especially for the occasion, and his only requirement was that it contain ice cream. The secret menu for the banquet was leaked ahead of time, but no one knew what the dessert called Clair de Lune would be. The dessert, created by pastry chef Ernest Mueller, was brought to guests as the band played "Fly Me to the Moon." It looked like a miniature white moon with craters, with an American flag planted on it, swimming in a "sea of darkness" sauce.

Clair de Lune contained almond pastry, raisin-brandy filling, meringue scorched with a blowtorch, and a sauce made of mountain-picked Oregon blackberries. Oh yeah, there was vanilla ice cream inside, too. It sounds yummy, but making it is such an elaborate process that you will read the recipe and decide to buy a box of ice cream sandwiches instead. It was the perfect dessert to cap off a performance of luxury dining for a crew of tired astronauts, Hollywood elite, and a president who desperately wanted to take credit for the moon mission. Read about that state dinner and see its memorable dessert at Atlas Obscura.


Meet Luigi Primo, the Pizza Dough Wrestler

Luigi Primo is both a wrestler and a pizza chef and he's stepping into the ring to deliver his finest to your face.

This professional wrestler in Austin, Texas has a unique gimmick: he wrestles while tossing around a circle of fabric that closely resembles a ring of pizza dough. He spins the fake dough as he tosses his opponents around and dodges their grabs.

You can read a 2021 interview that Primo gave in character to Wrestle Inn. He describes his immigration journey to America, how to make top grade pizza dough, and how to thrash opponents inside the ring.

-via Super Punch


10-Year Old Boy Saves His Mom from Drowning

The above video shows a complete and riveting story in a minute in just a half.

Fox News reports that, on August 5, Lori Keeney of Kingston, Oklahoma was swimming her backyard pool when she had a seizure and sank into the water. Her 10-year old son, Gavin, saw what was happening and rushed to jump into the water and keep her head above the water.

That's a big job for such a small boy and Gavin called out for help. His father rushed over, got into the pool, and helped lift up the woman until the seizure ended.

In the final few seconds of this compelling slice of time, the family embraced.

-via Instapundit


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