Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

How A Melancholy Egg Yolk Conquered Japan

Have you ever heard of Gudetama? He's a character developed by Sanrio, the folks who brought us Hello Kitty. Believe it or not, Gudetama is an egg yolk, and he's unbelievably popular in Japan.

(YouTube link)

It just goes to show that there are no stupid concepts anymore. Gudetama's popularity is a convergence of many factors, many of them exclusive to Japan, as explained by Vox. -via Viral Viral Videos


How to Make Maple Syrup

Ivan Garland and his family run Garland Sugar Shack, a small maple syrup manufacturing business in Vars, Ontario. In this video, they show us how the syrup is collected, processed, and packaged.

(YouTube link)

The entire video is charming and strangely soothing. Oh yeah, and interesting, too. -via reddit


Bear Joins Bike Ride

These guys were just having a great time biking through the Malinô Brdo bike park in Slovakia, when a bear decided to assert his territorial rights.

(YouTube link)

You know the answer to "How fast can you (run, drive, ride)?" is "It depends on what is chasing me." These cyclists could have set a record if they needed to. -via Viral Viral Videos


Getting Attached

Wouldn't it be sad if we always listened to common sense in order to keep ourselves from being hurt? Think of how much joy we'd miss out on just to avoid bad feelings. Then again, if it weren't for the bad times, we'd never appreciate good times. Love always involves an eventual loss, but that's what gives us the incentive to enjoy showering affection on our loved ones while we have them. This is the latest from Lunarbaboon. 


Up to 7000 Former Mental Institution Patients are Buried Beneath a Mississippi Medical Center

Mississippi's first insane asylum was established in 1855 in Jackson, thanks to the advocacy of Dorothea Dix. It was a step up from having no services for the mentally ill at all, but it wasn't great. Like many asylums, the Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum became a warehouse for people forgotten by their families, sheltered from the outside world, but not offered much in the way of treatment. The asylum got a new location in 1935, and the original location became a part of the University of Mississippi with new buildings erected on the grounds.

In 2013, construction for a road revealed 66 coffins. The following year, while building a parking garage, ground-penetrating radar showed more than 1000 coffins buried beneath the site. According to estimates, up to 7000 bodies may lie beneath the Medical Center’s grounds.

What to do with all these burials? Exhuming and reburying each body would cost an estimated $21 million. There is a plan that combines scientific and historical interest in the case and the dignity of letting the dead rest where they are. Read about that plan at Mental Floss.


7 Discoveries That Started as School Assignments

Sometimes you teach a young student scientific theory and they run with it …into the history books. Not only do students need to do experiments to show what they've learned, they often think outside the box, and bring enthusiasm to experiments that lead them into unknown territory. And sometimes it's just good observational skills and luck.

Kevin Terris couldn’t have asked for better luck during a field trip he took as a 17-year-old. While scanning the ground for fossils at Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah, the student spotted a baby dinosaur skull poking out of the dirt. Once the rest of the remains were uncovered, paleontologists concluded they belonged to the smallest and youngest duck-billed Parasaurolophus dinosaur ever recorded. They nicknamed the specimen “Joe.”

Terris and his classmates visited the dig site as part of a paleontology program at their California high school. The field had already been surveyed by experts when the students arrived, which makes the discovery even more impressive. After receiving his high school diploma, Terris went on to study geology in college. Joe, meanwhile, is on display at the Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology in Claremont, California, after providing important insight into the development of duck-billed dinosaurs.

Read about six other times elementary, middle school, and high school students made scientific or engineering breakthroughs at Mental Floss.

(Image credit: Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology)


15 Interesting Facts You May Not Have Known about The Joker

None of the many villains in Batman's wacky universe is as long-lived or appealing as the Joker. He was there from Batman #1 and remain his biggest nemesis today. Batman fans love the bad guy who is crazy enough to do anything and then come back again (no matter how many times he gets killed).

Find out more trivia tidbits about the Joker at TVOM.


21 Rules Of Thumb Every Adult Should Know

The readers of Cracked have come up with a useful collection of rules that you probably did not learn from your parents, because most of them solve problems no one had twenty or thirty years ago. Oh, sure, you learned etiquette from your mom, but you didn't learn about swiping photographs on someone else's smartphone.



Or how to gauge the best time to jump on a new piece of software. There are also rules about dressing, taking care of cats, planning an outing, and other rules of thumb that make perfect sense. Check them all out at Cracked. http://www.cracked.com/pictofacts-691-21-rules-thumb-every-adult-should-know/


Why Sci-Fi Alien Planets Look The Same

Tom Scott is in the United States, telling us about odd places again. He's explaining why so many movie location backgrounds look the same -it's money, of course. This is Hollywood's Thirty-Mile Zone.   

(YouTube link)

Now I won't be able to watch a movie without trying to peg the background of other movies I've seen. Thanks, Scott. -via Geeks Are Sexy


What's in a Name?

Neatorama presents a guest post from actor, comedian, and voiceover artist Eddie Deezen. Visit Eddie at his website or at Facebook.

Ethel Mertz had three different middle names in I Love Lucy. She was (in various episodes) Ethel Mae, Ethel Roberta and Eethel Louise Potter before marrying her husband Fred Hobart Mertz. Lucy's maiden name was Lucille Esmeralda McGillicuddy. Ricky's full name was Ricardo Alberto Fernando Ricardo y de Acha.

Clark Kent's middle name has been variously given as Joseph, Jerome and Jonathan. (Shades of Ethel Mertz!) Jimmy Olsen's full name? James Bartholomew Olsen.

Tarzan's real name is John Clayton, Lord Greystoke.

The Sweathogs of Welcome Back, Kotter were Arnold Dingfelder Horshack, Freddie Percy Washington, and Juan Luis Pedro Felipe de Huevas Epstein. Vinnie Barbarino was just plain Vinnie Barbarino.

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Alligator Tries to Hatch a Pumpkin

Comic artist Iguanamouth got a request from a user named insecurepumpkin to draw an alligator protecting a pumpkin (Yeah, if you were an insecure pumpkin, it would be nice to be protected by an alligator). And so this comic was born. Oh, this is just the beginning of the story. You'll find the whole saga of the alligator hatching a pumpkin at her Tumblr site. Believe me, it's worth the trip. -via Metafilter


Did This Mysterious Ape-Human Once Live Alongside Our Ancestors?

Homo naledi was very different from archaic humans that lived around the same time. Left: Kabwe skull from Zambia, an archaic human. Right: ''Neo'' skull of Homo naledi. (Image credit: Wits University/John Hawks)

In 2013, researchers in South Africa found the remains of a previously-undiscovered human species. In 2015, they introduced Homo naledi, a human with a tiny brain, ape-like shoulders, but other features that were more human. Where would this species fit in the homo family tree? A big step would be to date the fossils. Using several different methods, a team from the University of Witwatersrand led by paleoanthropologist Lee Berger has determined Homo naledi to be between 236,000 and 335,000 years old, much younger than such a primitive human should be -even younger than Homo erectus.

If these dates hold, it could mean that while our own species was evolving from other, large-brained ancestors, a little-brained shadow lineage was lingering on from a much earlier period, perhaps two million years ago or more. The proposed age range for the fossils also overlaps with the early Middle Stone Age, fueling a provocative, though unproven, possibility: that the stone-tool record in South Africa from that time wasn’t just the handiwork of anatomically modern humans.

“How do you know that these sites that are called [examples of] the rise of modern human behavior aren’t being made by Homo naledi?” says Berger, who is also a National Geographic explorer-in-residence. “You can imagine how disruptive that could be.”   

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Read about the latest research on Homo naledi at National Geographic News.


Accidental Optical Illusion

Redditor verantgoten took what he thought was just a cute picture of the place his 3-year-old son chose for hide-and-seek. I case you don't see it, the child is behind the mirror. At first glance, the optical illusion is that verantgoten, in the mirror, has feet below the mirror. Look again. When you look at the picture closely, it appears that the feet are not attached to any human legs at all!

Weird, huh? See, the boy is wearing pants that are not quite the same shade as the wall, but are the exact shade of the shadow on the wall. You can enlarge the picture even more here, if you need to.


Lunch Order

I had to go back and reread this before I got it. You know, a whole novel could be written about the altruistic IT worker who decided that autocorrect on government communications would not initially recognized the spelling of the word "launch." This is the latest from Randall Munroe at xkcd. Go to the comic to read the additional punch line in the hover text.  


Hobby Horse Championship

If you love horse shows and show jumping, but you can't afford to buy and board a horse, then the sport of hobby horsing may be for you. The sport's biggest championship took place a couple weeks ago in Vantaa, Finland. Around 200 competitors and a thousand spectators gathered to crown winners in several events and celebrate their peculiar sport.   

(YouTube link)

From the Washington Post:

Hobby-horsing has gained momentum outside Finland because of this year’s release of the documentary “Hobbyhorse Revolution” by the Finnish Oscar-nominated director Selma Vilhunen. Over a year, she followed young hobbyhorse enthusiasts and their preparations for a competition.

Some actual horse riders may look down on hobby-horsing as childlike past-time not suitable for anyone aged over 10, but Fred Sundwall, the secretary general of the Equestrian Federation of Finland, disagrees.

“We think it’s simply wonderful that hobby-horsing has become a phenomenon and so popular,” Sundwall said. “It gives a chance to those children and teens who don’t own horses to interact with them also outside stables and riding schools.”

-via reddit


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  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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