Miss Cellania's Liked Blog Posts

Ghibli Park Planned for the 2020s

Studio Ghibli fans are stoked to learn that a theme park based on the movies of Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata will be built at Aichi Prefecture’s EXPO Park in Japan. Ghibli Park is expected to open in "the early 2020s."

The park – located in Nagakute City, just east of the prefecture’s capital Nagoya –  was the site of the 2005 World EXPO. It sprawls over 200 hectares of land, and is rich with natural greenery and gardens. The park was initially opened in 1970 as the Aichi Youth Park (Aichi Seishounen Kōen), and was reopened for the World EXPO as the Ai-Chikyūhaku Kinen Kōen, a play on words using “love” (ai) and “earth” (chikyū) to include “Aichi” in the name of the park. While a lot of the facilities added for the World EXPO have been removed, there still remains a water park and swimming pool, ice skating rink, and a giant Ferris wheel.

Rocket News speculates on what such a theme park might contain, both good and bad. You'd expect a moving castle and a catbus, at the very least. -via Swiss Miss


The First Artificial Skating Rinks Looked Pretty But Smelled Terrible

The first artificial ice skating rink opened in London in June of 1844, after a few months in a temporary location at Covent Gardens. Strangely, that was before the technology was available to freeze water for the skating surface. The Glaciarium was decorated to resemble a winter wonderland, refreshing in the summer heat. It would have been easier to create the illusion if they had air conditioning.  

But, as Tim Jepson and Larry Porges write ​in the National Geographic London Book of Lists, it smelled noxious.  “At the time, ice couldn’t be manufactured and kept frozen in sufficient quantities to create a proper rink. The appalling smell of the substitute, a mixture of pig fat and salts, would be the project’s undoing,” they write.

Skating on a surface of lard in the summer had to be extremely unpleasant. The Glaciarium only lasted a few months before it closed down. But the technology to build a real rink came about some years later, and Londoners were skating on ice by 1876. Read how that came about at Smithsonian.


The Monster Under the Bed

Exactly. When my kids were growing up, there was way more complaining about real diversions than the supernatural ones. Too much noise, too much light, and in our case, there was always a sibling to blame it on. This comic is from Chris Hallbeck at Maximumble.


A Swiss Village Too Beautiful to Photograph

The residents of the charming alpine village of Bergün, Switzerland, held a meeting Monday and passed a new law -against tourist photography! Any tourist caught taking a picture would be fined five francs ($5.19).The reasoning behind the law was concern over others on social media.

“It is scientifically proven that beautiful holiday photos on social media make the viewer unhappy because they cannot be there themselves,” said the village tourist office in a statement.
 
Bergün/Bravuogn has a particularly picturesque landscape to offer, so it risks making people particularly unhappy, it feels.
 
“Bergün/Bravuogn is beautiful. We don’t want to make people outside the community unhappy by sharing social media photos of our picturesque landscape, and we cordially invite you to visit Bergün to experience it for yourself,” said mayor Peter Nicolay.

Вы просто не можете не поставить лайк за совершенно безумную историю про то, каков он #беспощадныймаркетинг в Швейцарии! . «Научно доказано, что красивые фото из отпуска, опубликованные в соцсетях, делают других людей – тех, кто просматривает снимки, – несчастными, так как сами они не находятся в этом месте», – говорит администрация и запрещает фотографировать свою деревню из-за её исключительной красоты. . Туристическое ведомство не отрицает, что это часть маркетинговой стратегии, но тут же уточняет, что запрет введён на законодательном уровне и имеет юридическую силу. Отныне тех, кто фоткается в деревне Бергюн, штрафуют. . И лично меня не столько возмущает сам штраф, как учёные, которые занимались исследованием инстаграма на наличие несчастных людей при виде крутых фотографий . Вывод какой? Фотографий из отпуска не будет!!! #снимитеэтонемедленно

A post shared by ЖЕЛЕЗНЫЙ МИР Пишу Пиарю (@propuskova) on Jun 2, 2017 at 2:55am PDT

The village removed photographs from its own Facebook account, and people started talking. Of course, that was the whole point, and the publicity stunt worked exactly as it was intended. Bergün's move and the backlash was covered in papers all over. By Thursday, the village announced it was granting "special permission" for visitors to take pictures, and the ban will be rescinded completely at the next village meeting. -via Atlas Obscura

(Image credit: Adrian Michael)


Dad Welcomes Daughter to Adulthood with Lunch

This is Meg Sullivan and her dad Tom. Tom has been packing Meg's lunch since kindergarten, but now she is graduating from high school. The family had been kidding him about the lunches, because he went so far as to peel her oranges for her up through high school. So it was a bittersweet experience when she unpacked her lunch on the last day of school.

It was bittersweet for Tom, too, as Meg is his youngest child and will be attending Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, Arizona, this fall. The symbolic push into adulthood has gone viral. Oh yeah, Meg had no trouble peeling her oranges, because she read the instructions.  -via Buzzfeed


Free Doughnuts for National Doughnut Day

National Doughnut Day is upon us! The holiday is set for the first Friday in June every year. The history of Doughnut Day is interesting: it was first celebrated in 1938 as a "thank you" to volunteers of the Salvation Army who handed out doughnuts to soldiers fighting in World war I.    

Many national doughnut chains are giving away freebies today. Unfortunately, there are no national doughnut outlets in my hometown. Those doughnuts are sold through the local groceries. But if you live in a larger city, check out the list of freebies at Uproxx. 


What's Inside My Hair Dryer

Dina Amin is a designer from Egypt. She became concerned about how modern consumer products are meant to be discarded instead of repaired, and the sheer amount of waste prompted her to take a look inside. What she found might surprise you!

I am not an animator, I studied product design, I am astonished by the amount of things we throw away especially when I go to scrap markets here in Egypt, and when I started posting photos of the products I take apart to learn why they break and are thrown away, people often commented saying that they never got to see whats inside the things they use daily, so I showed them, in an unusual way. And I thought I might have discovered the cutest way to talk about consumerism haha.

In addition to looking inside the appliances of modern life, Amin uses those parts to make something new and different and even animates them!

(YouTube link)

Taking one step beyond animation, Amin created her first automata out of recycled parts that you can see here. See more of her dismantled products at Instagram-Thanks, Dina!


Who Killed Jane Stanford?

The following article is from the book Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Plunges into California.

A wealthy woman cofounds a prestigious university as an homage to her son, but soon finds herself embroiled in a bitter fight with the university’s president over the school’s direction…and then she ends up dead. But who did it?

MIRACLES AND TRAGEDIES

Located in Palo Alto, Stanford University is considered one of the country’s top schools—in 2011, U.S. News and World Report ranked it fifth. But Stanford’s academic reputation isn’t nearly as interesting as the school’s great murder mystery.

New York–born Jane Lothrop married a young lawyer named Leland Stanford in 1850, and the couple meandered across the country until they settled in California. Leland eventually made a fortune, not in law, but by selling supplies to gold miners at exorbitant prices. By the 1860s, Leland was also California’s eighth governor and president of the Central Pacific Railroad. Soon, the Stanfords were one of the wealthiest couples in the nation, and gossips said the only thing their charmed life lacked was a child.

Then, in 1868, when Jane was 39 years old, she gave birth to a son, Leland Jr. At that time, it was uncommon for new mothers to be approaching 40, so the Stanfords called Leland their “miracle baby.” He was a cheerful kid who spent happy days on his father’s horse farm in Palo Alto. The boy also loved antiquities and wanted to be an archaeologist. His parents thought that was a great idea, so they took him to the Mediterranean to visit several archaeological sites. But during the trip, Leland Jr. got typhoid fever. He died in Italy in 1884.

“I WANT YOU TO BUILD A SCHOOL…”

Continue reading

Crayola's New Color

Earlier this year, Crayola announced it would retire the crayon color Dandelion to make way for a new color. That new color is the one you see here, inspired by a new blue pigment discovered at Oregon State University. The YInMn pigment contains yttrium, indium, and manganese, which it is named after, and oxygen. Crayola is looking for a color name that will be a little easier for those who use crayons, so they are running a contest to name it. You can enter your idea for the color name here. Be aware that the best names have already been suggested.

Bluey McBlueface

Blue Ivy

Covfefe

Mystique

Blue Manchu

Indigo Montoya

New Blue

and

-via Metafilter

(Image credit: Oregon State University)


Police Dog

That's a good dog. Just a little bit more intelligent than his training course was designed for. And he has empathy! He's just not cut out for police work, although he would probably make a wonderful therapy dog. This is the latest from Kevin Kuramura at Pear Shaped Comics.


Abduction

We have been warned many times that aliens from another planet won't be anything like we ever imagined. But what if they turn out to be more like us than we can imagine? In this video, Dave gets abducted by aliens and must undergo a routine physical and mental exam. At least that what I think is going on.

(YouTube link)

The point of the test is to see if humans are really an intelligent life form. By their standards, Dave probably registers somewhere around the level of all those cows they tested earlier. This sketch is from  Chris Smith and Jack De Sena. -via Tastefully Offensive


Graduation on a Subway Train


(Facebook link)

Jerich Alcantara left early for his graduation from Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing in New York City. He got on the subway wearing his cap and gown. But wouldn't you know it, the train was delayed and Alcantara, along with a trainload of other passengers, was stuck underground for several hours. So the other passengers held him an impromptu graduation right where they were.

"I was wearing the cap and gown the whole time, and honestly when we were on the train at some point it looked like everyone was kinda upset, tired of everything so I decided I'd just thank everyone for being there for my graduation that it meant a whole lot to me and then they just all started cheering," Alcantara said.

In the video, you see Alcantara being handed his diploma by a friend -which was an image on a phone. He missed the school commencement ceremony, but his family and friends threw their own celebration when Alcantara finally arrived. -via Atlas Obscura


7 Ways to Maximize Misery

There are any number of people who will give you advice on how to be happy. But honestly, there are many things you can do to create happiness, and some tactics will work better than others for any one particular person. CGP Grey takes the opposite tack and explains how you can make yourself miserable. These things are scientifically known to work. 

(YouTube link)

"Oh," you say, "but I've already done all those things." Well than, congratulations, you should be miserable. At least you know why. -via reddit


The Last Jedi: A Tribute to Luke Skywalker

Now that Luke Skywalker is an middle-aged Jedi master, with a history that spreads across the entire Star Wars saga, and is the main focus of the next Star Wars film, it's time to enjoy a supercut that's all about Luke.

(YouTube link)

Heroes Fan Productions made this short film that rearranges Star Wars footage to tell Luke's story… so far. -via Geeks Are Sexy


The Crazy House of Dalat

You may have seen a picture of the Crazy House in Dalat, Vietnam, but you need to see more because it looks different from every angle! It's even changed since we posted about it in 2012. Jürgen Horn and Mike Powell made time to take a tour and see every thing from the roof to the new construction in progress.  

Conceived by Vietnamese architect Đặng Việt Nga, the Crazy House opened in 1990 as a guest house. Her creation immediately made a splash on the architectural scene, with its cave-like rooms and organic tree-like passageways (mostly) drawing praise. Throughout its life, the Hằng Nga (as it’s officially known) has undergone continuous renovations and expansions; a new aquatic-themed room was being crafted during our visit.

Read more, and see pictures and video of the Crazy House of Dalat at For 91 Days.


Email This Post to a Friend
""

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window

Page 189 of 971     first | prev | next | last

Profile for Miss Cellania

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


Statistics

Blog Posts

  • Posts Written 37,312
  • Comments Received 108,045
  • Post Views 51,461,650
  • Unique Visitors 42,163,807
  • Likes Received 44,655

Comments

  • Threads Started 4,858
  • Replies Posted 3,578
  • Likes Received 2,496
X

This website uses cookies.

This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using this website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

I agree
 
Learn More