Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

Bark Air: The Airline for Dogs

An airline for dogs? It sounds like an April Fool joke, and the video makes the whole idea seem like a parody, but Bark Air is real. It was launched by the folks who bring us Bark Toys in Bark Boxes. For those who need to travel with their beloved dog, this is the ultimate in customer service. The dogs are treated better than any economy class passenger on a major airline.

But there are caveats. Bark Air does not operate its own planes. They use planes and pilots from other carriers, and take off from private airports. So far, there are only two routes, New York to London, and New York to Los Angeles. The London route costs $8,000 one way for one person and one dog. The LA route is $6,000. Still, it's a start, and Bark Air hopes to expand service and bring the cost down as they grow. That is, if there's enough demand for them to stay in business long enough to grow.  -via Nag on the Lake


A Bizarre Birth Experience at Babyland General Hospital

Believe it or not, Cabbage Patch Kids, the dolls that took the world by storm when they became the Christmas gift of 1983, are still a thing. One of their draws is that these dolls have a magical backstory. Each one is "born" at Babyland General Hospital, and the owner "adopts" the doll, with certificates and everything. Furthermore, Babyland General Hospital is a real place, and you can visit it in Cleveland, Georgia. Take a tour, visit the gift shop, and if you have the bucks, you can buy a doll that you can witness being born. If you don't have the bucks, you can watch someone else's doll being born.

The dolls are born from Mother Cabbage with the help of a costumed nurse who engages the crowd to help her through her labor pains. It's not clear whether Mother cabbage is a tree, a mound, or something hidden behind those things, but the ritual is the ultimate in kitsch, meant to engage a five-year-old but still a little beyond their understanding. Joshua Rigsby took his family to Babyland General Hospital and got to witness the birth of a Cabbage Patch Kid. His description of the bizarre ritual at Thrillist will make you want to visit just for the giggles. -via Damn Interesting

(Image credit: Kelly Verdeck)


When You Need to Find Your Friends



Every detail of Boba Fett's getup is perfect as he sets out on his adventure. Everyone knows who he is supposed to be, but once he makes it to a galaxy far, far away, he kind of blends in a little too well. There are Wookiees and Cereans and Biths and Jawas everywhere. Where are all his Mandalorian friends?  

This is an ad for Apple's new app called Precision Finding, available for iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro. I don't know anyone who has a 15, or can afford one, but the skit is pretty cool. The music will be stuck in my head for a while. May the fourth be with you. -via Boing Boing


The Civil Servant's Traumatic Lovelife

The monument you see above is in the Kensal Green cemetery in London. This is the grave of George Hill, who died in 1864. It has a lot of text carved into it, which was all about his job with the Colonial Civil Service in India. Apparently he was a highly-regarded employee, but rarely do you see much about one's occupation on a tombstone. Was this a case of a man who had no family? They are not mentioned on the monument, but he had plenty of family. George Hill had two wives and had sired 13 children, eight of whom survived to adulthood.

The tale of his first wife was tragic, and after her death, Hill married a woman half his age who had a child, although the circumstances of her first marriage were suspicious. The second marriage was salaciously eventful, and may be the reason all the room on his gravestone was taken up with the boasting of a successful career. Every life has a story, even if that person doesn't want it to be remembered. Read the real story behind the much-admired civil servant George Hill at The London Dead.  -via Strange Company


The Books Were Banned, So We Watched the Movies



Neatoramanauts are a particularly well-read bunch, so it stands to reason that you've read a lot of banned books. That means books that were banned or challenged by someone, somewhere, at some time, for some reason. The reasons for challenging a book vary widely, and whether you agree that the books should be restricted or not, some justifications are rather weird. Heaven forbid that adolescents should be exposed to the concept of menstruation! My parents never objected to any book I could get my hands on, and it turned out that the only ones that disturbed me were history books.  

Any type of book ban can entice readers and make a book a bestseller. But books that may be unavailable to some readers are catnip to movie producers, because the cinematic version will draw readers and non-readers alike. Weird History goes through the stories of 13 challenged books that ended up as movies. The vast majority of those movies were critically acclaimed or blockbusters or both.  


Orangutan Uses Medicinal Herb to Treat Wound

A group of scientists studying orangutans in Indonesia have observed an orangutan treating his own facial wound with a the leaves of an Akar Palo vine (Fibraurea tinctoria), which is known to have "antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, antioxidant, pain-killing and anticarcinogenic properties," and is used in traditional medicine. The Sumatran orangutan named Rakus was observed with a fresh facial wound below his eye, possibly from an encounter with another orangutan. Later, he was seen chewing the leaves of the vine and dabbing the juice on his wound. He finished up by sticking the chewed leaves on the wound. Five days later, the researchers saw that the wound had closed up.

This is the first time a wild animal has been seen using a known medicinal plant to treat a wound. Read about Rakus and his feat and what it could mean to the history of medicine at the Guardian. -via Damn Interesting


The Canal Built to Keep Canadians Safe from Americans

The Duke of Richmond would be the first to die trying to build the Rideau Canal, but he would be far from the last.

Canadians used the St. Lawrence River for shipping and traveling, but that river is also their border with the USA. After the War of 1812, our neighbors to the north decided they needed a safer, internal waterway that steered clear of the US. The Rideau Canal was an engineering marvel, 200 kilometers long, built by hand in less than six years, but the cost was high. The Duke of Richmond died of rabies, and a thousand of the workers who built the canal were killed by accidents and disease. The canal as a shipping lane was replaced by rail and road, but is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It also left a living legacy in the form of a rather important city.

This video ends at 8:30, followed by promotional material, then at 10:06 there's a bonus story told over the credits that is well worth the time. -via Digg


The Tatooist of Auschwitz and the Dangers of Holocaust Fiction

In the 1940s, Lali Sokolov met Gita Furman when he tattooed her arm at Auschwitz. The two fell in love, and after liberation, they moved to Australia where they spent the rest of their lives together. Furman didn't want to talk about the Holocaust, so Sokolov didn't, either. After Gita's death in 2003, he told his story to Heather Morris, a non-Jew from New Zealand who didn't know much about the Holocaust. Morris spent three years hearing Sokolov's recollections, and then another ten years trying to option the story as a play. Then she made it into a novel instead. The Tattooist of Auschwitz became a worldwide best seller in 2018.

Although classified as fiction, the book was based on Sokolov's story. Historians from the Shoah Foundation and the the Auschwitz Memorial Research Center, among others, found numerous historical inconsistencies and errors in the account of the tattooist. The story was like a game of telephone, passed from the subject 50 years after the fact, to a young writer with little historical background and no corroboration from Furman. Sokolov died years before the book was published. However, The Tattooist of Auschwitz is far from the only story fictionalized from the Holocaust, and as the generation of survivors disappears, there will only be more.  

The Tattooist of Auschwitz premieres today as a six-episode miniseries on Peacock. The TV adaptation addresses the inconsistencies in Sokolov's story by illustrating how he told it to Morris as an elderly man who suppressed those memories for 50 years. Read up on Sokolov's story, the controversial novel, and the TV series The Tattooist of Auschwitz at Smithsonian.  

(Image credit: Martin Mlaka/Sky UK)


Norwegian Movie Title Translations are a Hoot

It's always fun to see how other countries title American movies. They can be literal translations, but often the marketing team wants to convey what the movie is about, and Hollywood titles often don't do that. So a new title is created to work in whatever country the movie is shown in.

The Norwegians learned a shortcut. For almost a hundred years, American comedies were retitled with the word Help! plus whatever the movie was about. They didn't have to do that with the Beatles' movie Help! The titles became a kind of shorthand to let the viewer know this is an American comedy with just one word. YouTuber SindrElf shows us how many Hollywood comedies got the Norwegian title treatment, which will have you giggling like a little kid eventually. You can read more about the titling trick at Mental Floss. Sadly, they don't do this anymore because almost all Norwegians read enough English to keep the American titles.  


The First Murder Case Solved by Fingerprints

Fingerprints have been used to identify people since at least 220 BC -in China. They weren't used for solving crimes, but for signing documents (and they still do that). The Western world was slow to pick up the importance of fingerprints, but by the late 19th century, the idea of keeping track of criminals by their fingerprints led to printing arrestees for their records, and the concept of finding a perpetrator by fingerprint evidence was beginning to take off.

On June 29, 1892, two children in Necochea, Argentina, were murdered. Their mother, Francesca Rojas, was injured and identified the murderer as her neighbor Ramón Velázquez. Velázquez was arrested, grilled, and reportedly even tortured, but refused to confess to the crime. What's more, he had an alibi.

Then investigators found a fingerprint in blood on a doorway at the crime scene. They had the fingerprint removed by cutting the piece of wood from the doorway. Read how the first murder case was solved by fingerprint evidence, and how that case changed forensics around the world at Amusing Planet.

(Image credit: National Library of Medicine)


The Human Slot Machine at King's Day

Dudes playing fruit machine on king's day
byu/Bridimum infunny

Pay your euro and pull the lever! This human slot machine was set up during the Koningsdag (King's Day) celebrations last weekend in the Netherlands. The holiday is observed every April 27th for the king's birthday. Slot machines are called fruit machines in parts of Europe.

It takes a while for the slots to start spinning as the guys say their arms are tired, but they still have their sense of humor. The beer certainly helps. You can tell that most of their patter is jokes, even if you don't understand Dutch. The language has been described as the uncanny valley of languages, halfway between English and German, so both English and German speakers feel they should understand it, but don't, and the effect is that these guys are very talented at speaking gibberish. Is it rigged? That's beside the point, as even a losing player gets a piece of candy.  -via reddit


Why Some Songs End by Fading Out

File this under "things I assumed everyone knew but of course they don't," which becomes more of a thing the older you get. Some songs don't really have an ending, they just fade out while the artist repeats the chorus. I did not know that the fade out ending is rarely used these days. Taylor Swift's new album The Tortured Poets Department uses this technique, and some Swifties think it's a new thing. It used to be very common.

The fade out was not because the musicians didn't know how to end a song. They certainly do, as they make most of their money from live performances. In its heyday, the fade out was used for singles only; songs on an album rarely faded out before The Tortured Poets Department. However, the fade out has been performed live, in several instances before the advent of recorded music. Read about these historic performances and the modern use of the fade out at Mental Floss.


An Honest Trailer for Season One of Fallout



The post-apocalyptic Amazon Prime Video television series Fallout is based on the world of the video game series. It's become quite a hit among viewers, even those who've never heard of the video games. Now that the first season has wrapped up, Screen Junkies goes through it to give us their opinion. They give the premise in the video, but it's kind of like The Time Machine without the time travel. A lot of time has passed, which divided mankind in ways they will find hard to bridge. Their opinion? It seems Screen Junkies likes Fallout a lot. You can't point out a lot of tropes and errors when the whole story is so insane that we haven't seen anything like it before. Sure, they poke a little fun, but if this Honest Trailer were a review of a bad TV series, it would be way more scathing. It appears that Fallout is a shoe-in for renewal.


Get Your Star Wars Blue Milk Before It's Gone

Let's all raise a glass and toast to Star Wars Day coming up this Saturday! Raise a glass of what? Blue milk, of course. The drink that made young Luke Skywalker grow up big and strong (well, at least strong) is now available at grocery stores for a limited time from the Dairy Farmers of America TruMoo. Star Wars milk contains sugar and vanilla flavor, and Nerdist says it's really good, "like a very delicate melted vanilla ice cream." TruMoo even offers Star Wars recipes to make from or serve with the milk. It's just the thing to take the edge off after you've tried Dark Side Hot Sauce.

While Star Wars milk will only be in stores until it runs out (and you may have to search for an outlet), blue milk has been served for quite some time at Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge in Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, where it is a permanent menu item.  -via Boing Boing


The Lion King Gets a Prequel

The photorealistic remake of The Lion King in 2019 surprised fans of the 1994 original, even angered some, but kids loved it. In fact, it made a billion dollars in about three weeks. So of course Disney is going to do that again, with a prequel that tells the story of Simba's father. Mufasa: The Lion King will bring back many of the stars who voiced the previous movie in the same roles, this time listening as Rafiki tells Kiara (Simba and Nala's cub) how the orphaned Mufasa proved himself and became king of the Pride Lands. New voices include those of Mads Mikkelsen, Thandiwe Newton, Lennie James, and Blue Ivy Carter.

Mufasa as a cub is adorable, although I still can't get over the lack of expression in the realistic CGI lions compared to the classically drawn 1994 cartoon. And we can bet that we will be treated to a graphic demise of Mufasa's parents in true Disney fashion. Mufasa: The Lion King will open in theaters on December 20. -via Digg


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  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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