John Farrier's Blog Posts

Kermit and Miss Piggy Medieval Cosplay

Chloë of Odd Socks Cosplay and Frank Cleary of Frankie Doodles made this cosplay imagining fairy tale versions of Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy.

The Kermit is especially well-done, as his accessories include a lily pad shield and a blooming sword.

Photos: Event Horizon Cosplay


Wayne Manor from the 1966 Batman for Sale

In the campy 1966-1968 Batman television series, the home of Bruce Wayne was referred to consistently as "Stately Wayne Manor." The exterior shots were of a mansion in Pasadena, California.

Deadline reports that this home is now for sale. Price at $32 million, it comes with 7 bedrooms, 3 full bathrools, 4 half-bathrooms, and 3 three-quarter bathroom.

What is a three-quarter bathroom? Apparently one with a toilet and a sink and either a shower or a bath, but not both.

The Zillow listing provide no photos of the Batcave, but that's probably because it's a secret. Lift up the head of the Shakespeare bust and push the button to access it.

-via Will Meugniot on Facebook


The Island in a Lake in an Island in a Lake in an Island in a Lake in an Island in a Lake is an Island in a Lake

Do you see this lake? It's Yathkyed Lake in northern Canada.

Continue reading

Scooby-Doo Mystery Machine Transformer

Germain Lussier of Gizmodo asks, "What would happen if the Mystery Machine was an actual Autobot?" Let's not get ahead of ourselves. We aren't yet sure that it's not a Decepticon.

Hasbro is offering a limited edition Transformer that is inspired by Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? The four teenagers without an obvious source of legal income travel around the country, coincidentally encountering criminals. That's a dangerous line of work, so it's a good idea to have a combat robot along.

The Mystery Machine toy comes with heads for the four main human characters and a box of Scooby snacks that transform into our favorite Great Dane.


Playing Radiohead on Traditional Turkish Instruments

Hasan Ceylan is a musician with the Ankara State Conservatory in Turkey. He plays Turkish instruments from the Ottoman era, often using them to offer fresh perspectives on modern pop music. He's especially fond of Radiohead. In this video, he's playing "Exit Music (For a Film)."

On his YouTube channel, you can also find his performances of "No Surprises" and "Street Spirit (Fade Out)", as well as selections from Metallica, Celine Dion, and the Intersellar theme.

-via The Awesomer


Ice Cream with a Chocolate Cowboy Hat

Morgan on the Move, a travel influencer, stopped by Cheese & Crack, a gourmet cheese and snack shop in Portland, Oregon. You can buy cheeses, charcuterie meals, fine wine, and soft serve ice cream there, among other treats on the menu.

The ice cream is dusted with your choice of espresso, matcha, beet, strawberry, or chocolate malt. For just $1.50, you can get a tiny chocolate cowboy hat added to the top.


Lobster Crate Racing in Maine

How do you celebrate the Fourth of July in Maine? In the seaside town of Cutler, it's by running over fifty lobster crates strung between two docks. 

Cutler isn't the only town to engage in this traditional Maine sport. There's an upcoming race in Rockland on August 2. Run as fast as you can across the crates without falling into the water.

It appears to be a sport for children, although I don't see what adults can't try it. Orthopedists would certainly appreciate your efforts.

-via Rural Maine


Thief's Truck Was Stolen While He Was Robbing a Store

Arresting officers called it karma.

Police in Howard County say that a man parked his truck, left the keys inside, and then robbed a Verizon store across the street. When he got back to his getaway vehicle, it had gotten away from him. Someone stole it in the brief time that he was distracted by the robbery.

So he called 911.

Police came and interviewed him. He had a bloody hand. Yahoo! News reports that one of the store's windows was broken. Security cameras inside the store showed him pillaging it, so the officers arrested him and mocked him for his bad luck.


This Surfboard Is Filled with Beer

Chris Garrett of Phantom Surf is a master craftsman of surfboards in Australia. He made this unique board for the Gage Roads Brewing Company. It has an internal resevoir that can hold up to 10 liters (2.6 gallons) of beer.

So if you're hot and thirsty after a long day of hitting the waves, you can install a tap into the board and drain the contents. Watch a video about the construction of the board here.

-via Toxel


Formal Dining While Skydiving

The extreme stunts crew at Nitro Circus is back with another blending of the ordinary and the extraordinary. Everyone likes dining with friends, right? Some wine and fine good set a convivial mood, even if you're being dropped out of an airplane at the time.

The dishes are attached to the table, but the food remains in motion and partially eaten as these skydivers plunge to Earth. Eventually, they stand up, move way from the table, and open their parachutes.

-via The Awesomer


President Zachary Taylor Was the First US Military Officer to Receive a Brevet Rank

While reading a biography of Zachary Taylor by John S.D. Eisenhower (yes, the son of Dwight Eisenhower), I came across this interesting fact: Taylor was the first officer in the US armed forces to receive a brevet promotion.

A brevet rank is a temporary promotion given in honor of meritorious service. It is temporary until confirmed through regular procedure.

Zachary Taylor was President of the United States from 1849 through 1850. Prior to that, he was a long-service officer in the United States Army who achieved fame during the Mexican War.

Earlier in his career, during the War of 1812, he held a fort in the wilderness of Indiana against a Native American attack. With only 20 effectives, he was outnumbered 30 to 1, but nonetheless prevailed. President Madison awarded Captain Taylor the brevet rank of major--the first in American military history.


The Tuba Museum Exists

Niche Museums is a website that catalogs unusually specific musems around the world. It directs us to the Vincent and Ethel Simonetti Historic Tuba Collection in Durham, North Carolina. If you're into tubas, this your pilgrimage site!

Vincent Simonetti, one of the two founders, began building his collection of over three hundred tubas in 1965 when he encountered an unusual specimen. He and his wife, Ethel, operated a tuba business until 2011, when he sold it and offered his personal collection to interested viewers.

Would you like to see it? You can visit by appointment only on Tuesdays and Thursdays between 3 and 6 PM. A tour is free, but Mr. Simonetti does suggest a donation.

-via David Thompson


Burning Money Candle

Dries Depoorter is a Belgian artist, public speaker, and "concept provider." I would be skeptical about the last position as a real job, but my introduction to him is this clever candle that burns down at the rate of its cost. The candle costs €30 (that's $34 or 16 quatloos) and has 30 lines on it. As you use it, the money that you've spent on it burns away.

-via Flowing Data


Star Wars as an Amateur Production

Imagine what it would have been like if George Lucas had to produce Episode IV of Star Wars with only pocket change?

Secondhand Movie Company has recreated iconic scenes from Star Wars (and Jurassic Park) with props made of cardboard, duct tape, and spraypaint. Here's the introduction of Luke Skywalker and a drunk Uncle Owen buying droids on Tatooine.

It's not a shot-for-short remake of Star Wars. The scriptwriters have fun with the scenes by adding animosity and implied sexual tension between our two favorite droids. They also turn the iconic blue milk into paint and give Aunt Beru a beard.

-via Nag on the Lake


A Court Opinion Issued in Rhyme

In 1975, a criminal court in Georgia convicted Terry Brown and sentenced him to seven years in prison at hard labor. There was apparently a personality conflict between the presiding judge and members of the appellate court because the judge "demanded that if Judge Randall Evans, Jr. ever again was so presumptious as to reverse one of his decisions, that the opinion be written in poetry."

The appellate court did precisely that. Judge Dunbar Harrison composed the reversal of Brown's conviction in proper rhyme. You can read the full poem/decision at Justia and an article about it and other instances of judical humor in the University of California Law Journal.

-via Jarvis Best


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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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