Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

The Ten Most Disappointing Foods from Children's Books



When children enter a strange and different world in literature, they come across foods they've never heard of, but the characters love it. When they finally get the chance to try it, many of these foods don't hold up to the fantasy. Betsy Bird asked about disappointing foods from children's books and got tons of responses on social media. Now, you have to remember that many children's classics were written during war or other times of privation, before the dishes the reader grew up on were even invented. In 1950, C.S. Lewis convinced a generation that Turkish Delight was delicious enough to betray your family for. It was a letdown for many people to find out that an egg cream contains neither egg nor cream. And liverwurst sandwiches were cited from three different children's classics!

Betty G. Yee – “In A Wrinkle in Time, Meg Murry famously fixed herself a cream cheese and liverwurst sandwich. To this day i have no idea what it might taste like but when i asked for it at a deli restaurant the waiter turned a bit green and steered me to something else.”

Jennifer Ochoa – “Many Judy Blume mentions of liverwurst on rye with mustard….NOT DELICIOUS!!!”

Barney Saltzberg – “Great question. After reading Cricket in Times Square I had to try liverwurst. First and last time.”

Read some of the opinions offered as Bird posts the top ten disappointing foods and drinks that were mentioned in children's literature. You might relate to some of them. -via Metafilter


Meet Five Colorful Yet Monochrome Women



Check out five videos in the gallery above to meet five women who have a favorite color. Except they've taken that color to new heights, and designed their lives around one color each. Each are delightful in their own way. Continue reading to find out more about them.

Continue reading

Vote for the Wildlife Photographer of the Year People's Choice Award



The Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards for 2022 from the Natural History Museum were announced in October, all except for one. The voting is open to the public now for the People's Choice award, which will be announced on February 9th.



Voting is open until February 2. Take a look at all 25 images in the running carefully, because you can only vote for one. Clicking on a picture will give you to opportunity to vote for it. See the photographs in a ranked list with some information about each at Bored Panda. Be aware that some images may be disturbing.


Ancient Native Americans Traveled to Asia

The Altai Mountains in northern Asia, where Mongolia meets Siberia, have proven to be a treasure trove of preserved ancient human DNA. The cold and arid conditions mean that DNA can be sequenced from human remains that are thousands of years old. It was in this region that scientists found evidence of a new human species, the Denisovans, in 2010. Sequencing the DNA of many individuals from this region also make clear that it was a kind of crossroads for travelers from many cultures who left their mark by bearing descendants.

The migrations of humans from Asia into North America gave us Native Americans beginning 20,000 to 30,000 years ago. But genetic evidence from Siberia now shows that the migrations went the other way as well. Long after Native American DNA became distinct from earlier Asians, it showed up again in Asia. Three individuals who died around 500 years ago show significant DNA from Native Americans. Geneticists estimate that their American ancestors probably crossed back over around 5,000 years ago. The land bridge across the Bering Strait was gone by then, but they could have crossed by boat. Read about the new genetic discoveries in ancient human lineages that tell stories of human migrations at Smithsonian.

(Image credit: Nadezhda F. Stepanova)


When People Believed There Was Intelligent Life on the Moon



Around 1835, there was a movement to try to reconcile religious beliefs with scientific discoveries. There were also new and growing newspapers that would do anything to boost circulation, while feeling no responsibility for truth or journalistic ethics. In this environment, Richard Adams Locke wrote a series of satirical articles poking fun at those who believed that heavenly bodies would be populated because God wouldn't waste the space, so to speak. The Sun, which Locke worked for, published the articles, but didn't identify that they were satire. And the Great Moon Hoax was launched. Locke was shocked that readers took it seriously, but as we've learned many times since, people will believe what they want to believe. The Sun never bothered to explain that the articles were satire or print a retraction, because the hoax was profitable for them. Who cared if it was fake, as long as it sold newspapers? -via Nag on the Lake


Growing Up in a Family of Human Cannonballs



In 1969, David Smith had a case of wanderlust. He was a high school math teacher, and hated his job. So he packed up his wife Jeannie and their baby and ran off with the circus, literally. Smith had been a gymnast in college, and reconnected with an old friend who was a flying trapeze artist. Smith learned how to do it, and then Jeannie joined in, too. The couple made quite a name for themselves in the 1970s with another couple of trapeze artists as The Rock Smith Flyers. But eventually David Smith found himself looking for something else. Inspired by another circus act, he designed and built a cannon to climb into and be shot out of as a human cannonball! Under the name Cannonball Smith, he became the reigning cannonball act in the US.

Along the way, David and Jeannie had six children who all grew up in the circus. The four girls and two boys learned the flying trapeze at early ages, and one by one were shot out of a cannon as they got older. All of them performed the act professionally at least once, with several doing it for years. The third child, David Smith, Jr. is now the premiere human cannonball act, known as The Bullet. Read the story of the human cannonball family at Narratively. -via Damn Interesting


How a Photograph of an Execution Ended Up in a Tabloid Newspaper

In 1927, Ruth Snyder and her lover Henry Judd Gray were convicted of murdering Snyder's husband Albert and were sentenced to death by electric chair. It was a sensational trial that filled headlines and drew celebrities to the courtroom. But the execution on January 12, 1928, was even more sensational because of a photograph surreptitiously taken as Snyder was electrocuted.

You've probably seen the photograph, and the linked article contains two versions, but there is no need to post it here. While it is not gory, it is disturbing. That picture appeared on the cover of a special edition of the New York tabloid Daily News the next morning, and sold half a million copies above their normal daily circulation. It wasn't easy to get the picture, as cameras were not permitted at executions, and the guards knew every newspaper photographer in New York City. Photographer Tom Howard made history when he got away with taking it.

The image not only sold a lot of newspapers, it sparked a debate that still rages today between the public's right to see what happens and the unsavory appetites of those who would want to. Smithsonian looks at Snyder's crime, how the photo was taken, and the controversy surrounding its publication.


The Worst Thing You Can Call an Australian

Warning: This video is liable to make you hungry. An American might imagine some pretty horrible insults passed around Down Under, but Australians can laugh most of them off rather easily. To some, the very worst insult is to be called "un-Australian." The latest annual ad from Meat and Livestock Australia makes it clear that the consequences of being un-Australian are harsh. But there's peril in such a narrow and rigid definition of what's Australian (and what isn't) that's dangerously xenophobic. She's right; it's getting out of hand. But when everyone is un-Australian, they can all be un-Australian together, and enjoy a lamb barbecue! You may need to consult an Aussie slang dictionary to understand everything these folks are complaining about, but it's not necessary to enjoy the video. Check out some funny outtakes, too. Still, you may be left with questions, like exactly how do Australians eat a meat pie? With a spoon? -via Metafilter


Very Expensive Movies that Failed at the Box Office

The bigger they are, the harder they fall, especially in the movie business. If your movie grosses $20 million at the box office, that's really good- if you made it for $5 million. But if you spent $100 million dollars to pay the biggest actors and travel to the nicest locations, then you've got yourself a bomb. Studios sometimes invest ludicrous amounts of money in a film just to see it crash and burn in front of audiences.




Shortly before Avatar: The Way of Water was released, James Cameron said that it would have to make two billion dollars to be profitable. That raised some eyebrows, but the movie is nearing the two billion mark now. Read about 15 movies that had huge budgets, but didn't turn out so well for their investors at Cracked.


The Night Kate Shelley Saved 200 People from a Train Wreck

Have you ever crossed a railroad trestle on foot? Have you ever done it at night during a storm that had already destroyed another nearby bridge? Wearing an ankle-length nightgown? You might do it if people's lives were at stake, and that's what 15-year-old Kate Shelley did in July of 1881. A storm had washed out the wooden supports under the Honey Creek railroad bridge in Iowa, which collapsed when a pusher locomotive crew came by to check the bridges.

Shelley lived nearby with her mother and younger siblings, and heard the locomotive crash. She told the two surviving crew members she would go for help. Living by the railroad, Shelley knew a passenger train would be coming in less than an hour, and she had to go to the station at Moingona to warn the railroad company of the bridge collapse. But to get there, she had to cross the larger Des Moines River trestle, and run two miles further to Moingona. Read the story of Kate Shelley's heroic actions that night that saved around 200 passengers and crew from plunging to their deaths at Honey Creek.


This Animated Dance Video Looks Eerily Familiar

Eclectic Method has been delving into the artistic possibilities of artificial intelligence. In this video, he's fed video dance sequences into an algorithm and prompted it to produce anime-style characters dancing. The song is a real bop, but watching the dancers takes you slightly into the uncanny valley. You will recognize a lot of the dancing here, but it's not the people who originally made those oh-so-familiar moves. And the cartoon characters don't necessarily look as you'd expect.  

For example, there's a split second where you see what is obviously Pee-wee Herman dancing on the counter, but he has Steven Seagal's face. The video draws heavily on Saturday Night Fever, Grease, Dirty Dancing, and Footloose, among other movies. You'll also recognize the dancing of Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire, too. But really, is this any odder than rotoscoping by hand? You might be better off not thinking too much about the AI part and just enjoy the mashup. -via Geeks Are Sexy


"Y'all" is a Perfectly Cromulent Word

My kids have always been impressed with my ability to instantly switch back and forth from formal, educated speech to my natural hillbilly patois,* depending on who I'm speaking to. That includes using the second person plural "you" instead of the much more useful contraction "y'all." However, "y'all" is the better word. There is a natural tendency among American English speakers to separate the plural "you" from the singular "you," which has given us abominations like "you guys" and "you'ns."

For much of the last couple of centuries, the use of "y'all" has tagged someone as being from the American South, which opened the door for denigration of the word because of who uses it. But it did not originate in the South; we brought it over from the old country, namely England. Nor is it isolated in the South. The rest of the US is fast adopting the word because it fills that need for a separate second person plural in a straightforward and inclusive way. Read about the origins and the modernization of "y'all" at the Conversation. Now if we can just get rid of that apostrophe, everyone would be able to spell it. -via Atlas Obscura



*In this case, "impressed with" actually means "laughed about."


Oscar Mayer Needs Weinermobile Drivers

If you've always had a yearning to drive the Oscar Mayer Weinermobile, or if you're looking for a position that will take you places (and put you up in a hotel), then this is the job for you! Oscar Meyer is looking for recent college graduates to sign up for a year as a "hotdogger." Not only will you drive the Weinermobile, but you'll be a brand ambassador, giving talks to the public and logging your adventures on social media. This would be especially attractive to those with a new degree in communications, public relations, or marketing.

WRDW spoke to a couple of hotdoggers about what the job was like, and found out that the first thing a hotdogger does is learn how many hot dog puns can possibly be jammed into one interview.

The job description is online
until January 31st, if you think you can cut the mustard.  -Thanks, WTM!


The Man Who Killed More People Than Anyone Else

Who is the person who has killed the most people? This question is often answered with various leaders of nations or armies, like Hitler, Stalin, or Genghis Khan. While they might deserve the title, they only ordered those killings, which were carried out by many people. The one person who murdered more people by his own hand than any other in history is Vasili Blokhin, a name you've likely never heard before. He holds the Guinness World Record for the "World's Most Prolific Executioner."  

Blokhin killed plenty of people in World War I, then for the Soviet Secret Police, then in World War II he both gave orders for mass killings and killed a horrendous number of people himself. In the worst episode, in an operation to liquidate 20,000 Polish POWs, he personally shot more than 7,000 of them himself, one by one, over a 28-day period. Read about the bloody hand of Vasili Blokhin.  

After telling Blokhin's gruesome story, Today I Found Out attempts some mind bleach by looking for the person who has saved more human lives than anyone else in the same article. There are several very interesting candidates for that title.


Taste the Rainbow? Let's Make a Rainbow!

Oooh, pretty! TG posted one of those parlor tricks that is circulated in schools and summer camps, but is rarely seen by those of us who don't have young children at home. Now we can all try it! The replies under this Tweet have some pictures from people who have done this at home, and a lot of inquiries into why TG didn't use any yellow Skittles. Maybe he ate them all. Since the Tweet was posted without explicit instructions, it drew the attention of two candy companies.

I, too, thought they were M&Ms at first glance. I don't eat Skittles, but this might push me into buying a small package. -via Everlasting Blort



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  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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