This man has seen some things. This is Danish polar explorer Ejnar Mikkelsen, as he looked to his rescuers after two and a half years of holing up in a makeshift cabin with engineer Iver Iversen. They had gone on an expedition to northern Greenland in 1909 to recover documents from an earlier expedition. When their ship Alabama was trapped in ice, the two men set out with a sled to continue their journey. When they returned to Shannon Island, they found the rest of the expedition had left with a whaling ship on the assumption that the two were dead. Mikkelsen and Iversen built a hut from wood salvaged from the ship, and survived the next two winters on seal and polar bear meat. Finally, a Norwegian whaling ship found them in 1912. Read about the Alabama expedition and the ordeal of being stranded on Shannon Island at Vintage Everyday.
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A dog named Sienna was found as a stray on the streets of Altavista, Virginia. She then went into care at the Campbell County Animal Care and Control Facility, and no one came forward to claim her. Sienna was being walked at a public adoption event last weekend when she was strangely drawn to a man sitting down. He hadn't called her, and he didn't know the dog. But Sienna sat down and placed her paw on his foot. Then she pawed at his leg and sat down again. The man's wife appeared and thought the scene a big odd, then she realized that her husband was about to have a seizure. She was able to get him to their car and take care of him.
Sienna's behavior was exactly that of a dog who had been trained to detect and alert for impending seizures. But why would a dog with such training be abandoned? Is it possible that Sienna is so sensitive that she would warn a stranger even without training? At any rate, Sienna has been hailed as a hero, and she has received donations for veterinary care and several adoption applications. -via Fark
(Image credit: Friends of Campbell County Animal Control)
Learning the art of skateboarding takes courage and the willingness to fall and get up again. Imagine how much courage it takes to do that when you can't see where you are going. Dan Mancina is a blind skater who founded Keep Pushing Inc., an organization dedicated to serving the differently-abled community. He built the world's first accessible skate park in Detroit, Michigan. The Ranch is designed for blind skateboarders who use a cane, and also for those with low vision and even people who use wheelchairs. In the video above, Mancina explains some of the adaptive features of the skate park, which include Braille labeling, high contrast, and audio signals. You can see other blind skaters try the park out at Laughing Squid.
Mancina was a skater before he went blind, but then returned to the sport he loves. He is determined to open up that world to other blind skaters. Continue reading to see his story.
Hummingbirds drink flower nectar, which is heavy in sugar to meet their energy needs. But over the last century, the native flowers they depend on have become less available. So what do we do? We hang hummingbird feeders. There are constant arguments about the wisdom of hummingbird feeders, with some telling you not to do it. Honestly, planting more native flowers would be a more natural solution, but that would take years and more acreage than you can contribute.
Experts say there's nothing wrong with hanging hummingbird feeders with sugar water in them. But there are some caveats. You should avoid commercial hummingbird food preparations, especially those with red dye. And when you leave sugar water out for days, it will attract bacteria and fungi, so it crucial to keep your bird feeder clean. Read about the dangers hummingbirds face when eating from a dirty feeder, and learn the right way to do it at Vox.
(Image credit: Alhill42)
Warning: this Honest Trailer contains mature themes, meaning sex and violence. The movie Sinners opened in theaters two months ago and got rave reviews from both critics and audiences. If you had to slot it into a genre, it could be called a vampire musical. But Sinners is much more than that. Set in 1932, it incorporates the themes of religion, racism, and the blues. In other words, it's intense, and unlike anything you'd expect in a horror film. Directed by Ryan Coogler and starring Michael B. Jordan, Sinners had high expectations from the start. It's the eighth-highest-grossing film of 2025.
You can tell that Screen Junkies liked Sinners a lot, but they still manage to have fun highlighting its extreme parts. The movie's soundtrack got an awful lot of acclaim, but there's hardly any music in this video. Otherwise, this Honest Trailer is like a long trailer. Sinners is now available on home video.
Every year, Smithsonian makes recommendations for interesting small towns to visit during your summer vacation. Quite a few made the list this year because of their special anniversary celebrations. Edgartown, Massachusetts, will host Amity Homecoming Weekend, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the movie Jaws. Why? Because most of the movie was filmed there, as Edgartown stood in for Amity Island. In Berea, Kentucky (where both my parents and both my children went to school), the Berea Craft Festival is celebrating its 35th anniversary in July, and historic Berea College is celebrating its 170th anniversary. Ticonderoga, New York, will commemorate the 250th anniversary of America's first offensive victory in the Revolutionary War at Fort Ticonderoga. Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, is marking the 75th anniversary of the day they changed the town's name for publicity purposes. Read about these and other small towns that cater to interests of all kinds in a list at Smithsonian.
Have you noticed the rise of purple streetlights in your town? I haven't, but that may be because my small town is trying to look quaint and vintage to draw tourists. Purple streetlights are being noticed all across America. There must be a reason for that, like being easier on the eyes or safer. It's none of that, and and it turns out to be a pretty dumb reason. To get to the bottom of it, this video goes through the change from sodium vapor lamps on our streets to LEDs. Sure, there are a lot of advantages to LEDs, particularly in the amount of energy they use. They are certainly brighter, even though a lot of folks don't like them. LEDs use the visible spectrum of light differently in an attempt to mimic light from the sun, with less success than we'd like. The purple has been showing up only in the last few years, and it's not intentional. The good news is that LEDs are getting better all the time.
In the late 19th century, the race was on to be the first to reach the North Pole. Most expeditions used ships, sled dogs, and substantial crews and still couldn't get there. Swedish engineer Salomon Andrée had a better idea- why not just fly to the North Pole? Andrée proposed taking a hydrogen balloon to the Arctic to cut the travel time way down. His idea was to fly the balloon with long ropes that dragged against the ground to make the device more controllable, and he would steer with attached wings. The idea sounded simple, but turned out to be anything but.
Andrée and two crew members, physics professor Nils Strindberg and engineer Knut Frænkel, took off from Danes Island on July 11, 1897. Nothing went right. First, the long ropes became tangled, and had be abandoned. Then the balloon leaked hydrogen. Andrée sent reports back by homing pigeon, but then all communication ceased and the balloon crashed three days into the journey. It was in 1930 that the three men were found, far away from the balloon. The story of the Arctic balloon expedition was told in Andrée's diary and in pictures from the camera they had with them. You can read about the expedition and their desperate attempt to reach civilization at Amusing Planet.
Emin: How many hours of the day do you hoot?
Owl: Who?
Emin: Hey, I'm asking the questions here!
And so it goes if you interview an owl. Emin Yogurtcuoglu, the Bird Detective, is a Turkish wildlife photographer and a serious birdwatcher. But even he was surprised when he had the opportunity to get up close and personal with an owl in Argentina. He called it the experience of a lifetime. It might be that these birds live so far out in the wilderness that they've never had to be afraid of people. It took a few days to get that close, but a couple of owls didn't seem the least bit afraid of Emin nor his videographer. The relationship culminated in a personal interview. He tried various languages, but finally fell into speaking the owl's language. Who? The owl. His patience and gentleness were greatly rewarded when he achieved the final image in this video.
One of the more bizarre ways to die is spontaneous human combustion. This is when a person's body is found to be burned while the surroundings, and often the person's extremities, are not burned at all. Dozens, and maybe hundreds, of cases were recorded during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, so much that Charles Dickens included the phenomenon in his book Bleak House (shown above). Those cases were sensationally covered in press reports, and were often exaggerated for effect. But spontaneous human combustion is a real thing, although rare.
It's not something that the rest of us should be afraid of. It never happens in public, and never in the animal kingdom. There are certain similarities in the documented cases that give scientists a clue. Forensic pathologist Roger Byard said that spontaneous combustion doesn't happen in animals because animals don't “wrap themselves up in blankets and drink whiskey and smoke.” Read about the particular sequence of events that lead to spontaneous human combustion at Popular Science. -via Strange Company
In the Star Trek universe, everyone has a universal translator, which enables aliens from various planets to communicate with each other. That is necessary to tell the stories on television, but it makes the whole idea seem impossibly simple. The fact that beings from different planets would use language to communicate is about as likely as meeting extraterrestrials that had arms, legs, and faces. The 2016 movie Arrival addressed the difficulty of cross-species communication, but Star Trek went there back in 1991 with the Star Trek: TNG episode "Darmok." This is one that stayed with a lot of fans.
Even with the universal translator, Starfleet cannot understand what Tamarians are saying, because their language is not as simple as words and ideas. Captain Picard is challenged to find what their language is really about. Andrew Muir of The Art of Storytelling explains how profound the difference is, and how Captain Picard learned the way to decipher what a Tamarian is really saying. -via Laughing Squid
This pink refrigerator would be right at home in a Barbie Dreamhouse, but it's out in the Namib Desert, about a 20-minute drive from the main highway in Namibia. What's even more surprising is that it's working, powered by solar panels. And it is stocked with cold drinks!
Desert travelers might think it's a mirage, the kind you see in old cartoons when a character is stranded in the desert. No, this is an installation from the Namibia Tourism Board, as a quirky rest stop for those willing to seek it. It was puzzling when it was first installed a few years ago, but now tourists take a detour off the main road just to check it out -and get their picture taken with it. Not only is it a delight for sightseers, it makes you wonder why solar refrigerators aren't in every home in that country. A little digging tells me that such fridges are quite expensive because they are taxed extra as a luxury item in Namibia. Incidentally, those who have been to this refrigerator warn others not to sit on the metal chairs. -via Nag on the Lake
One generation was traumatized by Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 movie The Birds. Another generation, perhaps their children, learned to get along with their friends and neighbors thanks to an eight-foot feathered friend named Big Bird. The Bell Brothers have brought those things together as Big Bird steps into the horror flick as if he belongs. Chaos ensues. Meanwhile, Big Bird is frantically performing the rap from Outkast's 2000 song "B.O.B (Bombs Over Baghdad)." Every time a number comes up on the lyrics, the Count from Sesame Street is there for it. As well he should be. The resulting avian remix is titled B.O.B. (Birds Over Big Bird). It's projects like this that make me feel a little less apprehensive about the future of the internet. -via Geeks Are Sexy
When someone references "the world's smallest violin," they mean that their sympathy for you is minuscule and they really don't care. The earliest pop culture reference was in a 1978 episode of M*A*S*H, when Margaret Houlihan rubs her thumb and finger together and says, “It’s the world’s smallest violin, and it’s playing just for you.” However, the joke could be much older.
But now scientists at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, England, have broken the record for making a violin very small. They covered a chip in two layers of a gel substance, then used thermal scanning probe lithography to etch a violin on it. A layer of platinum was applied, then the underlying material was removed. The result is a platinum violin that is 13 microns wide and 35 microns long, smaller than the finest human hair.
The violin is just an image, and is not playable. If it were, you wouldn't be able to hear it. But it's terribly tiny. -via Slashdot
(Image credit: Loughborough University)
We have a hard time visualizing how big the earth really is. We know intellectually that it's more or less a sphere that's about 24,000 miles around at the middle. From the surface to the sphere's center is 6731 kilometers (3958 miles). We've barely scratched the surface, literally, when we try to dig deep into it. How can we visualize that distance in a different way?
Here's another mind blowing comparison from MetaBallStudios (previously at Neatorama). They take a core sample out of the earth the size of New York City and raise it up above the surface! The city itself is included for scale. This core blows past the altitude of the ISS in no time. You might want to keep your cursor over the pause button, because there are captions that describe what we are seeing, including terms you'll want to look up. Stay to the end, because there's a surprise sequence you won't want to miss. -via The Awesomer