The Giambattista Valli gown that Ariana Grande wore at the Grammys recently was humongous, lavish and obviously expensive. While her outfit did produce some memes about her becoming the next flying-type elite four member of the Pokemon league, some people did want to wear something similar to Ariana’s dress, without paying the high price. Micarah Tewers does exactly that. With $40, 150 yards of fabric, and the help of her friends and family, watch as she recreates the famed dress!
Due to the spread of the coronavirus all around the world, the Geneva Motor Show for this year has been cancelled. However, despite being cancelled, the annual event still decided to push through their show “without even opening its doors.”
Every year since 1905, the show has been seen as the moment for automakers to reveal their latest innovations, often amazing with extreme power, advanced technology and always jaw-dropping designs. For 2020, these debuts continued as ever as brands pulled the clothe off their cars online rather than onstage.
DesignBoom lists their top 10 cars for this year’s (online) motor show. Check it out over at the site.
Making sandcastles takes a long time, and it is a difficult thing to do. Just making a simple sandcastle already requires patience, dedication, and hardwork. Calvin Seibert, however, decides to ramp up the difficulty by making not just sandcastles, but sand fortresses.
“In hindsight I see that much of what I made was more like sculpture. It really was all about the object and its resonant meanings rather than interiors and spatial flow,” he says.
After studying at the School of Visual Arts, the Colorado-born artist began sculpting modernist buildings featuring sharp angles, clean edges, and various geometric shapes that resemble brutalist architecture rather than something from a children’s story. “While not all of my structures have quite the rugged fortress-like presence of a Kenzo Tange or a Paul Rudolph building, it is something I aim for,” he writes. “Certainly I see my sandcastles in opposition to those frivolous turreted fantasies that Cinderella would feel at home in.”
How does he make these finely-detailed sand sculptures? Find out over at Colossal.
Located in Japan’s Toyama Prefecture (one of the country’s smaller prefectures which borders Ishikawa and Nagano) is Japan’s very own Swiss Alps — the Hida Mountains. Also known as the Northern Alps, the Hida Mountains boasts beautiful and elegant scenes, as well as the view that make you feel like you’re in the European Alps.
So it’s the Alps, but in Japan.
Check out the photos by local photographer Yasuto Inagaki over at Spoon & Tamago. You can also follow him on Instagram and Twitter.
Ever since we were kids, we were always reminded by the people around us to brush our teeth, visit the dentist regularly, and floss (no, not the dance popularized by the backpack kid). We do these things to keep our mouth healthy, and oral health is said to be linked to the health of the whole body. Unfortunately, there are some of us who don’t floss and don’t visit the dentist regularly. Perhaps this study might change their mind.
Colorado State University microbiome researchers offer fresh evidence to support that conventional wisdom, by taking a close look at invisible communities of microbes that live in every mouth.
The oral microbiome - the sum total of microorganisms, including bacteria and fungi, that occupy the human mouth -- was the subject of a crowd-sourced, citizen science-driven study by Jessica Metcalf's research lab at CSU and Nicole Garneau's research team at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. Published in Scientific Reports, the study found, among other things, a correlation between people who did not visit the dentist regularly and increased presence of a pathogen that causes periodontal disease.
Do you love being a couch potato? Are you good at being a couch potato? Well, you might be the person that USDish needs. Right now, they are offering $1,000 for the person who will binge watch 15 hours of the mockumentary The Office. There’s a twist, however.
… As part of the coveted gig, you’ll need to take meticulous notes on the common tropes that occur in each episode.
For instance, how many times does Stanley roll his eyes at the camera? And how often does Phyllis talk about Bob Vance from Vance Refrigeration?
So if you think you can do the challenge, you can go apply now before March 16 (Monday), 5 PM, MST.
Austin-based Vodka maker Tito’s Vodka has clarified on social media that their vodka cannot be used as hand sanitizer. Even if it’s handmade. Even if alcoholic beverages have alcohol, it doesn’t really sanitize! While it would be good for the company if people would keep buying their alcohol, the company had to set things straight, as Eater detailed:
The confusion arises amid a shortage of hand sanitizer as concerned members of the public attempt to protect against the spread of the novel coronavirus. That lack of supply has led to price gouging for hand sanitizer online: a box of small Purell bottles that might sell for $10 typically are now listed for hundreds from secondary sellers on Amazon. It’s also led to DIY advice and online recipes for homemade hand sanitizers, most of which call for rubbing alcohol (99 percent alcohol by volume) plus aloe vera gel.
Tito’s, meanwhile, is actually just 40 percent alcohol by volume, not the 60 percent required to kill viruses. As Dallas Morning News reporter Dom DiFurio noted, the company will probably have to keep Tweeting ad nauseam while people on Twitter threaten to “get me a handle of @TitosVodka and make some hand sanitizer for my family.”
“Per the CDC, hand sanitizer needs to contain at least 60% alcohol by volume,” Tito’s writes soberly in reply after reply, attaching an explanation for added clarity.
You know Kevin James from the TV series King of Queens, and some movies, too. Now he's taken to YouTube to bring us some blissfully short (most less than two minutes) comedy skits. Several of them have James in the role of a movie sound technician encountering job problems, like he hasn't read the script, as in the above video, or not getting any cooperation, as in this one.
Yeah, I figured they were so short, you may as well try out two of them. You can check out all his videos from the last two weeks at James' new YouTube channel. -via Metafilter
George Lucas and Steven Spielberg had dreams, some that they shared, and when they reached the point where they both had Hollywood clout, they could so any kind of film they wanted. So they designed a thrill ride that gave us Indiana Jones.
“What we’re doing here, really, is designing a ride at Disneyland,” Spielberg kept telling his collaborators. Spielberg wanted Raiders to be less of a linear story and more of a series of increasingly giddy cliffhangers. Spielberg, Lucas, and Kasdan designed Indiana Jones to be a classical, mythic man of action, the kind of guy who steals the horse and launches himself after the truck without thinking twice about it. They succeeded wildly. Raving about Raiders, Roger Ebert wrote, “It’s actually more than a movie; it’s a catalog of adventure.”
Some people are never going to be happy. They take a vacation trip to a US National Park and then leave a one-star review. Artist Amber Share found some rather interesting one-star reviews on various public sites and used the complaints in them to illustrate park posters in her series Subpar Parks.
So many sports evolved gradually from one form to another, but trampoline -both the apparatus and the sport- are the product of one man's imagination. That should be George Nissan, who was inspired by a 1930 visit to the circus as a teenager. When the aerialists dropped to the net below them, he saw them bounce and thought that would be fun ...if the bouncing could continue. Nissen's granddaughter Dian tells his story.
Nissen continued to pursue his dream in college, where he teamed with his gymnastics coach Larry Griswald to produce the first viable prototype in 1934 made with angle iron, canvas and inner tubes to give it that oh-so important bounce. The rubber parts were later replaced with metal springs for durability and strength.
The duo persisted with their invention by promoting its uses with children and athletes. As popularity soared, they started the Griswold-Nissen Trampoline & Tumbling Company in 1942. Griswold was dropped from the business name after the gymnastics coach later left the business to pursue a solo career in acrobatics, diving and entertainment.
“My father knew he was on to something,” Dian says. “He took it to a YMCA camp to try it out and the kids loved it. They wouldn’t even get off it to go to the pool.”
In the middle of Rome, there is a stone stairway leading from the Arx of Capitoline Hill down to the Roman Forum. These are called Scalae Gemoniae, and they were the site of many executions during the height of the Roman Empire, because the more public an execution is, the more it displays power to the masses.
Falling down a flight of stairs by itself was seldom fatal, so the condemned was usually strangled, then their lifeless bodies bound and thrown down the stairs. The bodies remained at the bottom of the stairs for a few days until they started to rot or were partially scavenged by dogs and vultures. When Lucius Sejanus’s body came tumbling down the stairs, the frenzied crowd themselves tore it to pieces. The corpses were then dragged off with a hook and thrown into the Tiber.
After Tiberius’s death in 37 AD, the practice of execution on the stairs became less frequent, although the stairs continued to be used in this fashion throughout the imperial period. One famous victim of the stairs was emperor Vitellius. During the brutal battle for Rome between Vitellius' forces and the armies of Vespasian, in 69 AD, Vitellius was dragged out of his hiding place and driven to the Gemonian stairs, where he was tortured to death. His body was then flung down the stairs where it was attacked by Rome’s residents. Indeed, getting executed and abused on the stairs was a matter of great shame and dishonor for the dead.
Although I prefer a good Port Salut, the judges at the World Cheese Contest in Wisconsin gave the top prize to a Swiss gruyere. The Associated Press reports:
The cheese from Bern, Switzerland made its maker, Michael Spycher of Mountain Dairy Fritzenhaus, a two-time winner. Spycher also won in 2008. [...]
The contest is the largest technical cheese, butter and yogurt competition in the world and started Tuesday in Madison with a record 3,667 entries.
The 55 judges taste, sniff and inspect the 132 classes of dairy products during the biennial contest. The judges include cheese graders, cheese buyers, dairy science professors, and researchers from 19 nations and 14 states.
According to legend, Saint Patrick drove all of the snakes out of Ireland. Nonetheless, one made it back into the country and bit a 22-year old man in western Ireland. It was a puff adder--one of the world's most venomous snakes--which the man decided to keep as a pet. The Irish Postdescribes this pet:
Considered one of the most aggressive and dangerous snakes of its kind, the puff adder carries a particularly venomous bite.
Most commonly found in Morocco and Western Arabia, the species is responsible for more snakebite fatalities than any other African snake.
Just one bite can lead to necrosis of the flesh and even death if left untreated.
Forced to visit his local hospital, doctors treating the biten Dublin man got in touch with the National Reptile Zoo for help.
Sure, some people will say that this wondrous event was caused by plumbing problems. But I prefer to attribute it to divine intervention. UPI reports that water taps in the Italian village of Settecani began pouring out wine from the local winery:
Officials at the winery said technicians investigated and discovered a technical fault had caused wine to leak from a silo into water pipes.
The high pressure of the wine leak was enough to displace the water in the pipes, resulting in the spilled alcoholic beverage entering the water supply and the homes of nearby residents.