Who doesn't love Thanksgiving leftovers? You have the taste of the formal feast, on your own schedule, in the amount you want, eaten in front of the TV without all those annoying relatives around. Usually, the gravy is the first thing you run out of. Now you can buy leftover gravy to stretch out those leftover sandwiches! Heinz is offering a limited run of their Heinz Homestyle Turkey Gravy in a squeeze bottle for appropriate portion control and placement, appropriately called Leftover Gravy. It was inspired by a sandwich called the Moist Maker from the TV show Friends.
Don't look for this product on grocery store shelves. Leftover Gravy is only available through Walmart online, and it comes with a recipe that mimics the Moist Maker, although with a different name. The first run sold out within hours, but they made more, and you have to keep trying to see if supplies have been replenished. Otherwise, you'll just have to use a jar, or learn to make gravy.
Miss Cellania's Blog Posts
We're familiar with what they say about orange cats: they're large, very food-motivated, and all of them share one brain cell between them. Trekkie lives up to the reputation in the food department. In fact, he's an outlier there, because he will eat almost anything, and he wants it now. If it can be identified as food, he's going for it, and you just try to stop him. Trekkie will even steal food from a hot stove!
His family has had to take extraordinary measures to protect the family's food supplies. When Trekkie gets too rowdy in the kitchen, they put him in the bathroom with the door shut. So he learned how to open the door. Besides doors, he's learned to open packages, jars, devices, and it's all for the goal of getting to the food. That takes more than the allotted number of brain cells. Trekkie is a smart orange cat- he just goes overboard in the other stereotype.
In 1961, Yogi Bear was spun off from Huckleberry Hound and got his own cartoon show. Yogi lived in the fictional Jellystone Park and craved pic-a-nic baskets. He seemed pretty harmless.
Also in 1961, at the very real Yellowstone National Park, people flocked to see grizzly bears in their natural habitat. Some would approach grizzlies, or even try to touch one out of a car window. Grizzlies were getting used to humans, and flocked to campgrounds to steal food. Even worse, the park had pits to dump garbage into, which drew grizzlies, and in turn drew tourists who wanted to take pictures. The most popular bear that year was Sylvia, a 225-pound mother with three cubs. She would allow visitors to get within 25 feet to take pictures. In addition to Yogi, Sylvia was a reason people thought they could get close to a grizzly.
Meanwhile, brothers John and Frank Craighead were at Yellowstone studying whether humans and grizzlies could co-exist in the park. From their 12 years of research, we get the story of Sylvia, the tamest grizzly at Yellowstone, and what happened to her. -via Strange Company
(Image credit: National Park Service)
You pour a cup of coffee at the coffeemaker, then you carry it to wherever you are going to drink it. You are liable to get some drops on your clothing or on the floor. I don't have that problem because my coffeemaker's carafe is also a vacuum bottle and I take the whole pot to my desk. Scientists, on the other hand, often must share a coffeemaker, so they have spent a lot of time studying the physics of coffee, coffee cups in particular, to figure out why they are so prone to spillage. It's physics.
Madelyn Leembruggen of SciShow explains the research done on this problem, which has to do with resonant frequency. If this video has your eyes glazing over at the science, get another cup of coffee and stay with it, because she also tells how to keep your coffee in its cup. There's a 32-second skippable ad at 3:45. -via Metafilter
The skies over America are suffering the effects of inflation. Har har. Right now there are at least seven dirigibles dispatched over parts of the US. Some of them are actual blimps, which are non-rigid and are shaped by the air inside, and others are airships with internal frameworks. Those terms get confusing when you talk about the Goodyear Blimps, which used to be blimps but are now airships with frames, yet they still use the term blimps because everyone knows them like that.
Anyway, three of the currently flying airships are Goodyear Blimps as they travel to various events. Two more are advertising blimps, and two are from LTA Research. One of those is a blimp, and the other is an experimental rigid airship that's 406.5 feet long, making it the biggest modern aircraft in the world. Read about these airships, and where you might spot them, at The Autopian.
(Image credit: Mercedes Streeter/LTA Research)
We all know that there is a big difference between adopting a dog and adopting a cat. Everyone who has a cat will tell you its story, which often is just "He showed up one day and never left." This is commonly called the Cat Distribution System. A thorough investigation by Cat Lovers Forum has uncovered how the system works, and it will blow your mind. Since the discoveries were all under the cover of darkness, the results of the investigation are explained in this weirdly animated video. The covert operations may remind you of an international spy operation, or at least Men in Black. This is the only way the Cat Distribution System could possibly be as successful as it is.
Once you understand how it works, those cat stories all make sense. And now we know why dogs dig in the yard. While the main headquarters has yet to be identified, those in the know suggest looking in Istanbul. -via Geeks Are Sexy
In a post last week, we learned that were 6,000 shipwrecks on the Great lakes, and that was just in one century. The first documented shipwreck was in 1679 when the Griffon went down. But the lakes have revealed dugout canoes that go back as far as 5,000 years. How do we know this? The Wisconsin Historical Society’s Maritime Preservation and Archaeology program has been identifying, studying, and mapping the remains of ships found in the Great Lakes. This work is carried out by people like underwater archaeologist Tamara Thomsen.
Shipwrecks are better preserved in the lakes than they would be in an ocean, due to the fresh cold water. New technology like GPS and personal aircraft make finding the wrecks easier. So Thomsen no longer looks for shipwrecks, but she dives down to those that have been reported to study and document them. The ship remains, and any artifacts, are left in place to become memorials. Some are added to the National Register of Historical Places. It's a really cool job for someone who's passionate about diving. Read what that job involves at Smithsonian.
(Image credit: Tamara Thomsen)
Friendsgiving is the custom of having a Thanksgiving feast among friends instead of family. It has become pretty popular in the 21st century because of a few trends in modern society. Young adults live far away from family because of their jobs, and often can't get enough time off to travel home (or can't afford to). They are postponing starting their own families. And sometimes they just can't go home because their family is toxic. But they still want to indulge in the traditional harvest feast, so a circle of friends make it happen. It sure beats watching TV and eating ramen all alone on Thanksgiving.
In fact, Friendsgiving is so popular that even people who celebrate with their family often have a separate feast for friends on another day. The idea isn't new, but it has exploded in recent years due to social media. Vox has the story of how Friendsgiving became what it is today. -via Laughing Squid
The title of the article is Why Do Diners Across America All Use the Same Mugs? I instantly knew the answer- it's because they don't break. Well, they might if you threw them hard against a concrete wall, but in everyday use, they are super sturdy. I use one every day because it's tough, well-insulated, and most importantly, it fits in my car's cup holder, unlike all other coffee cups.
But the story is really about how this particular coffee cup came to be, and it's more interesting than just someone getting a good idea. Their first manufacturer was Victor Insulators of Victor, New York, who made porcelain insulators for high voltage electrical transmission. Their founder had developed a special method of producing porcelain that was dense enough to produce the high resistivity needed and withstand plenty of current. Victor Insulators did not set out to make coffee cups as a side gig, but they jumped at the opportunity when it was presented. Read the story of the common ceramic diner mug at Mental Floss.
(Image credit: Quercus acuta)
I don't normally post product review videos, and I know nothing about game playing tables, but you will enjoy this. First we learn that there are tables made specially for people who are serious about tabletop games, and they are quite expensive. Jeff Kornberg of The Dragon's Tomb makes videos about tabletop games, such as how to play them, and his reviews can be hilariously scathing. Seemingly unaware of this, a company called Starmork offered to send him their new deluxe game table to review. Note that the table isn't actually for sale in the normal manner; it's a Kickstarter project.
Kornberg tells the tale of their correspondence, which took months, but he finally received the table. Here he presents it to you in all its glory. As far as we know, it's the only such table in existence. That may be a good thing. As funny as the review is, the punch line at the end is delivered by someone besides Kornberg. -via Metafilter
The photos above were taken by Peter Fisher on assignment for National Geographic. This is Volcán de Fuego, an active volcano in Guatemala. Its eruptions killed a couple of hundred people in 2018, and has caused mass evacuations several times since then.
Fisher spent several days on this photoshoot. He tells about climbing up the mountain to the camp, then walking several hours each day to get to the volcano, hoping for a good shot at an eruption. At 12,000 feet of elevation, the days are brutally hot and the nights are very cold. Each step forward means sliding back on the volcanic ash. Ash gets into your airways and clings to your skin. And the volcano is a dangerous place be, yet you have to get near it. "It’s pure moth-to-flame energy."
Once an eruption begins, there is no time to set up shots, you just take them. Fisher explains that the squiggly lines in his photographs are because of the ground shaking beneath his feet. Read more about the experience of photographing an active volcano at A Time of Gifts. -via kottke
In 2003, there was a Broadway musical called Wicked based on the two witches from the movie The Wizard of Oz. As happens a lot in the 21st century, the story was retrofitted to tell the tragic backstory of a classic villain and make them a sympathetic character. Wicked the Broadway musical proved to be very popular, so it was made into a movie in 2024, also called Wicked. But not quite, because that was only the first part of the story. The second part, titled Wicked: For Good, is opening across the US this weekend. So it's about time that Screen Junkies gave us an Honest Trailer for the first film.
The best part of an Honest Trailer for a musical is the disrespectfully self-aware parody lyrics they give to the songs. You won't hear them until halfway through this trailer, but they are worth the wait. Otherwise, they had to stretch to say anything truly critical about Wicked. My impression was that the movie went way overboard with the special effects in an effort to make it look less like a stage musical, and it still looks like a stage musical. A lot of people actually like that. Screen Junkies appears to have also liked Wicked.
Film buffs will tell you that Westerns can be sorted into everything before Akira Kurosawa's 1954 film Seven Samurai and everything that came after. Seven Samurai wasn't even a Western; it was set in feudal Japan, but the authenticity, cinematography, and action sequences influenced Hollywood to take it up a notch. That quality came with a cost- the movie took a year to shoot, and the budget ended up at ten times what was originally planned.
The plot in which a village hires a ragtag group of mercenaries, each with a particular set of skills, to battle the bad guys, will be familiar to you from the many other films that used elements of it, or even all of it. The simple story leaves plenty of room for the development of each character's personality and for meticulously choreographed action scenes. Seven Samurai was a big hit and has since become a classic, often regaled as one of the best films of all time. Read how Seven Samurai came about, and what it meant for filmmaking in the long run, at Smithsonian.
A few months ago, MinuteEarth gave us a video about all the different kinds of dogs, and as you would expect, they were inundated with requests to do the same for cats. So we get the whole feline family tree, going back to Proailurus, the first cat, which lived around 30 million years ago.
From Proailurus, we got all the other cats, from extinct saber-toothed tigers to exotic big cats to domestic kitties. The cats that still live in the wild come in more shapes, sizes, and species than you know. Even the familiar wild cats are not as closely related as you might think. Domestic cats are pretty much all the same species today, although some of the more exotic breeds are deliberate hybrids. Even so, domestic cats come in different breeds the same way dogs do, and they each have their own distinct charms. The vast majority, however, are just generic domestic cats, which are all lovable. -via Geeks Are Sexy
Before synthetic fabrics, most raincoats were made of fabric coated with wax or rubber, which made them stiff and heavy. Meanwhile, the Inuit people of the far north had lightweight, flexible, breathable, waterproof outerwear made out of the intestines of seals, walrus, whales, and sometimes even bears. As you can imagine, whales provided the most usable material.
By nature, intestines are strong, barely permeable, and somewhat stretchy, perfect for sausage casing and even better for rainwear. The intestines were cleaned, inflated, dried, and cut into strips. Then they were stitched together using a special waterproof sewing method. The resulting garments were worn overtop the Inuits' usual warm clothing for outdoor chores in rainy weather, and especially used to protect hunters and fishermen in kayaks from a deadly cold soaking. The McCord Stewart Museum in Montreal studied and restored one of these coats a few years ago and documented their construction. Read more about the intestinal raincoats and see plenty of pictures at Vintage Everyday. -via Messy Nessy Chic