Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

A Cypriot Lion and Its Doppelgänger

The Twitter account Cats of Yore normally gives us vintage photographs of cats, but also some delightful surprises. Just look at the smile on this lion sculpture! The funerary stele might be 2400 years old, but he looks strangely familiar, doesn't he? It's like we have seen this lion before somewhere.  Hmm, big smile, tongue hanging out, human-like teeth, eyes strangely flat on the face...

(Image source: Lejonet på Gripsholms Slott)

Yes, we've seen this lion before. It is on display at Gripsholm Castle in Sweden. The lion was a gift to King Frederick I in 1731. When it died, the pelt was taken to a taxidermist who had never seen a lion, and he did his best by pure guesswork. Ulrika Good told the story of the lion back in 2011 and the lion, already viral in Sweden, went global. The lion was Photoshopped into so many memes that a Facebook page sprung up to archive them, and it's still active!

(Image source: Wikimedia Commons)

And now we find out that some sculptor in the fourth century BC had the exact same vision of a lion when he was commissioned to chisel one out of limestone. He had probably never seen a real lion, either.  


May Now Knight of Queen

The headline makes sense when you learn that Brian May has been knighted by King Charles III. May's new honor was included in the U.K.’s annual New Year’s Honors list. He was recognized for his contributions to music and to animal welfare advocacy. May responded to the honor by saying he hopes the knighthood will give him “a little bit more clout.”

That was tongue in cheek, of course. May is known globally as the guitarist and songwriter for the band Queen, but his interests are wide ranging. He has long advocated for animal rights, and founded the organization Save Me in 2010. He is also an astrophysicist, stereograph collector, gardener, and a member of the Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists. As such, May already has plenty of clout. Just ask the millions of Queen fans who followed them in the 1970s, witnessed Live Aid in 1985, discovered the band via Wayne's World in 1992, or saw the movie Bohemian Rhapsody in 2018. -via Fark


Laurence Brown Becomes an American Citizen



Laurence Brown (previously at Neatorama) normally brings us humorous and often stinging observations about the differences between Britain and the US in his Lost in the Pond series. Born in England, he's lived in the US for about 14 years now with his American wife, and for seven of those years has been making YouTube videos about the contrast between the United States and his home country. Now he's finally become an American citizen! In this video, he takes us through the process as he experienced it, in his wry and self-deprecating manner. The real excitement is when he finally confronted the citizenship test, covering subjects he's researched and made videos about. He also studied diligently for it. But when the crucial moment arrived, he came close to panicking and forgot everything he learned! Somehow he managed to pull it together just enough to become a dual citizen with the right to vote. Congratulations and welcome to the club, Laurence!


What to Eat for Good Luck in 2023



While the New Year holiday really doesn't signal anything more significant than a new calendar, it's a symbolic time of reset and renewal, of looking back and looking forward, like the two-faced Roman god Janus, for which January is named. As such, there are plenty of superstitions connected with the New Year holiday. Many of these involve food! In my neck of the woods, hog jowl, black-eyed peas, and cooked greens are served for luck in the new year, but I alter that to pork chops, black-eyed peas, and broccoli. Each dish represents something good that will happen if you eat it. There are plenty of other food superstitions from all over the globe associated with good fortune for the new year. If we call them traditions instead of superstitions, we can just enjoy them for what they are. Read about eleven traditional good luck dishes for New Year's Eve and New Year's Day and what each is supposed to mean at Thrillist.


That Time a Frat Party Gave Us a New Year Tradition

When Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians played "Auld Lang Syne" at the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan while ringing in the New Year of 1930, it wasn't planned as anything other than a nostalgic song out of their regular repertoire. While the song had a tenuous connection to the show's sponsor, that idea wasn't set in stone. It was just a tune that they sometimes used to end their set. They had no plans to repeat it every year. But it eventually became "the" song of the New Year holiday.  

"Auld Lang Syne" might not have become the tradition that it is if it weren't for the fact that the University of Virginia liked the Canadian orchestra, and hired them for various campus events and celebrations. And the fact that the band would party with the UVA fraternities afterward. Read what happened and how those parties contributed to our holiday traditions at Atlas Obscura.


Sleepy Skunk's 2022 Movie Trailer Mashup



We've been waiting all year for it (and he's been teasing it for a month), and now it's finally here! Louis Plamondon, YouTuber Sleepy Skunk, has unveiled his 2022 movie mashup just barely before the New Year holiday. The annual video is a cleverly-edited collage of the year's biggest films, with clips taken from movie trailers. This year's video comes in three sections, beginning with epic shots of set pieces, followed by a section of visual music beats, and ending with the emotional moments designed to pull on your heartstrings. The list of movies used is here. How many of these movies have you seen?

See also: Sleepy Skunk's previous movie mashups.


Discovered: An Organism that Eats Viruses

Some creatures are carnivores and eat animals, others are herbivores and eat plants, and some, including humans, are omnivores and will eat both. But until now, we haven't identified an organism that eats viruses. Of course, we ingest viruses, along with bacteria and other microbes. But scientists have now observed a species that ate viruses in the absence of other nutrients and thrived! That makes them "virovores."

In an experiment, various pond water microbes were isolated, introduced to purified water, and fed Chlorovirus, a common virus that infects algae. The plankton genus Halteria multiplied to 15 times its population, while the Chlorovirus population was reduced. In a control sample without the virus, Halteria didn't grow at all. That doesn't mean that Halteria is unique. There may be many species that feed on viruses that we don't know about yet. Read about the discovery of virovores at New Atlas. -via Damn Interesting

(Image credit: Don Loarie)


The Battle Over the Ken Doll's Bulge



Ruth Handler designed an adult fashion doll for little girls to play with. Her name was Barbie, and she hit the market in 1959. The Barbie doll became a hit, and soon Handler decided she should have a boyfriend. Mattel went to work on a doll named Ken, after Handler's son. But there was a problem. The dolls were meant to be dressed and undressed, because they were fashion dolls. Barbie appeared anatomically correct (if unrealistic) for an adult woman. What would Ken look like undressed?

No one wanted to give Ken realistic genitalia, but Handler wanted him to have a "bulge" in his pelvis. The male executives at Mattel were horrified and resisted the idea. The doll would not be anatomically correct without one, and it would look weird even with clothing on. But how big would such a bulge be? Would a bulge traumatize little girls, or would the lack of one be worse? After all, little girls have fathers and brothers. And Mattel executives knew that the first thing a child does to a fashion doll is to undress it. Maybe they could paint permanent underwear on Ken. Read about the fight over Ken's crotch and how he ended up the way he is at Business Insider. -via Digg


The Weird Thing About Geosynchronous Orbits



Floating high above our world, there's a network of satellites that are watching us. They relay information from and to earth, and to each other. They enable our global phone, TV, and internet systems. They geolocate us and allow GPS to send us on our way. And since they appear to stay in the same place all the time, they must have very specific orbits. Geosynchronous orbits and geostationary orbits are not exactly the same, but they are both rather weird. They would not be possible if our planet were the slightest bit different from the way it is. In other words, if we lived on Jupiter or Venus, we couldn't have satellite TV. Imagine that. Minute Physics tells us why.


100 Facts We Learned in 2022

If you've got some free time between holidays, you might want to read, or at least skim through, a list of some things we learned in 2022 on a wide-ranging number of subjects, like animals, artificial intelligence, art, archaeology (wait, is this list in alphabetical order?), music, space, celebrities, health (I guess not), pets, chemistry, food, history, and more. You need to know about how a new Guinness World record was set for a mass gathering of vampires, how monkeys use tools for masturbation, and how a poll to name a Uranus probe didn't result in "Uranus Probe."    

Mental Floss has put together a mega-list recapping the tidbits of knowledge that crawled across the internet in 2022. You can listen to it the Mental Floss List Show video, but it's 52 minutes long. Lucky for us, they also give us the text version, so you can skip the stuff you already know, if that's what you prefer.   


The Reasons Methuselah (the Tree) has Survived for 5,000 Years



A bristlecone pine in California is the oldest living thing on earth. The tree named Methuselah is estimated to be around 5,000 years old! How in the world does a tree last that long? It comes down to adaptation to environmental stresses, plus luck in the extremity of those environmental stresses. Minute Earth explains how Methuselah is perfectly adapted to deal with the things that normally kill trees. Then there are humans, like the one who killed Methuselah's neighbor Prometheus. In that case, Methuselah was defenseless, but also just plain lucky. This video is only two and a half minutes long, the rest is a promotion.   


Parks Canada Announces the Most Memorable Public Toilets Of 2022

There are plenty of lists detailing the events of 2022, and ranking the movies, albums, celebrities, and other things that made a splash during the year. If you happen to cover, or be an expert in, something that's a bit off the beaten path, there's no reason you can't make your own year-end list of what you know. And so we have a list of 2022's most memorable public latrines offered by Canada's national parks and historic sites. The federal agency Parks Canada puts in a lot of work to make sure visitors are able to go when they need to go. The facilities are designed to serve while blending in with the natural world.  

Canadian travel writer Jennifer Bain has visited all the parks, which are large and natural, meaning there isn't modern plumbing available everywhere. The particular benefits of each outhouse is honestly described. They are all functional, which is most important, but they all have something that makes them interesting, like a clever design, a wonderful view, or surprising features like motion-sensor lights. The roundup is a lot more interesting than you would imagine, and it may even entice you to visit some of these parks. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Jennifer Bain)


Weird Supreme Court Shenanigans Worthy of a Soap Opera

Through most of the history of the United States, the Supreme Court has kept a low profile compared to the other branches of the federal government. With lifetime appointments, the justices do not have to make a public spectacle of themselves to be re-elected, nor do they have to please constituents. The individual justices can be as private as they want. If you look into their backgrounds, you may find some reasons they wanted to stay private. After all, Supreme Court Justices are people just like the rest of us, with all the messiness that comes with that.

One justice actually went to prison while he was on the Supreme Court. Another had a nervous breakdown over a case. Two justices actually dated each other, although that was long before they served together on the court. One was almost framed for drug possession while another was targeted for murder. Read five stories of weird happenings involving Supreme Court Justices from history at Cracked.


Behold Miss Ukraine's National Costume

It's not often that a national costume at the Miss Universe pageant can be described as "badass." The Sisters of Battle in the Tweet refers to a religious order in the lore of the video game Warhammer. It's an apt reference. The actual name of the costume is "Warrior of Light," worn by Miss Ukraine 2022 Viktoria Apanasenko.

Lesia Patoka
designed the costume, which was built over a four-month period, sometimes by candlelight, with sirens wailing in the background. Ukraine is in the eleventh month of full-on war since Russia attacked Kyiv on February 24.

"It is the personification of inner strength, courage, determination and will flowing in our veins. War cannot break our strength and will not discolor our hearts. Ukraine will bloom like a phoenix even in a fire. It shines with bright rays of kindness and faith," Viktoria shared on social media.



The Miss Universe 2022 pageant will be held in New Orleans on January 14th. -via Fark


Life-Saving Kindness in Buffalo

The horrific winter storm last weekend brought nearly four feet of snow to parts of western New York state. The death toll in the Buffalo area stands at 27, but it would have been higher if people hadn't opened their doors to strangers. Among the many stories of rescue and hospitality, that of Sha'Kyra Aughtry stands out. She heard a man crying outside, and her boyfriend Trent brought him into their house. They believe he may have been trying to walk home from his workplace. Joey was suffering from frostbite. Besides taking care of him, Aughtry was able to contact Joey's family and eventually arranged transport to a hospital. She even accompanied him so he wouldn't be frightened. We don't know Joey's prognosis, but he is being cared for in the hospital's burn unit. You can read the story at the Twitter thread or the Threadreader version. -via Metafilter, where you'll find links to more stories about people stepping up to help those stranded by the weather.


Email This Post to a Friend
""

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window

Page 229 of 2,620     first | prev | next | last

Profile for Miss Cellania

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


Statistics

Blog Posts

  • Posts Written 39,295
  • Comments Received 109,532
  • Post Views 53,112,359
  • Unique Visitors 43,682,010
  • Likes Received 45,727

Comments

  • Threads Started 4,982
  • Replies Posted 3,726
  • Likes Received 2,678
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