Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

A Valid Response to an Extortion Offer

Jermain Loguen escaped from his Tennessee slavemaster in 1834 by stealing a horse. He made his way to New York, became a minister and a noted abolitionist, started a family, and built schools. As he became widely known, the wife of his enslaver wrote a letter to Loguen in 1860. It started off as a friendly update on her family and Loguen's family members who were still enslaved, then demanded Loguen send $1000 for the horse he stole (which had been returned), or else she would sell him in absentia. Loguen replied with a letter for the ages. Here's just a small part.

You say you have offers to buy me, and that you shall sell me if I do not send you $1000, and in the same breath and almost in the same sentence, you say, “you know we raised you as we did our own children.” Woman, did you raise your own children for the market? Did you raise them for the whipping-post? Did you raise them to be driven off in a coffle in chains? Where are my poor bleeding brothers and sisters? Can you tell?

There's a lot more to the letter, which drips with "unutterable scorn and contempt." Read the entire response at Letters of Note. -via Nag on the Lake

(Image credit: William Simpson)


The World: a Most Exclusive Private Residential Ship

When you have more money than you could possibly spend, you might consider traveling the world, or you might want to purchase (another) luxury home among other people of the same class. Then there are the people who do both. The World is a unique cruise ship that has 165 luxury apartments on board and cruises around the world every year. People can buy these apartments for millions of dollars, and then pay recurring fees for food and services. In return, all your needs are met in the swankiest ways, and you can see the sights of the world from the comfort of your own home. Plus your neighbors are all people of means who must be accepted by current residents before they purchase a slot on the ship.

Peter Antonucci spent six years on The World, in five different apartments, upgrading each time he moved. While the ship traveled around the globe, he came and went as he pleased, flying home to New York or going on extended adventures, and then flying to The World's location to rejoin the cruise. After moving back to dry land, he used his journals to write novels set on a ship. Antonucci told CNN about the process of purchasing an apartment on The World and what it's like to live this way. It's a glimpse into a life the rest of us can only dream of. -via Fark

(Image credit: Eric V. Blanchard


Why It's Best to Fly Early in the Morning

When my kids lived at home, they flew off on adventures often, and their flights always seemed to leave at 4, 5, or 6 AM. I know this because I had to drive them to the nearest commercial airport 90 minutes away. Now I know why- early morning flights tend to be less expensive than those later in the day. But that's not the only reason you might want to book an early morning flight -and annoying the person who gets up super early to drive you to the airport is not a sufficient reason.

Another reason to fly early in the day is that the odds of flight delays or cancellations are lower for flights leaving first thing in the morning, and there are a bunch of different reasons why later flights can run into problems. There are other reasons why morning flights are a better idea all around, which you can read at Mental Floss. It helps if you are able to sleep on a plane.

(Image credit: Dmitry Avdeev)


It's Award Season for Simon's Cat!



The Academy Awards will be given out on March 10, and that's only a couple of weeks away. That's as good a reason as any for Simon Tofield to present his "Simon's Cat Awards." These are some of the same categories as the Oscars, but the competitors are all characters from the world of Simon's Cat. What we get are vignettes from the many cartoons, around one to two minutes each, that illustrate the acting chops of the cats that create non-stop chaos and the surprising peripheral characters. However, I don't believe all of them are from the past year. My favorite is the visual effects award.  


The True Origin of the Klerksdorp Spheres

What would you guess this object is? An ancient bead? A ball for some kind of game? Maybe a kitchen tool, like a rolling pin? None of the above, and it's not even manmade. This is a Klerksdorp Sphere, found inside a three billion-year-old rock formation in South Africa. It does look strangely round, and the grooves around the middle seem like deliberate decoration. But this is how they are found. Could they have been left by aliens, or maybe some long-forgotten sentient civilization that died out long before mankind arose? Some people believe that, and that they even have mystical powers. One in a museum is said to have rotated on its own, inside a glass display case.

However, there is a perfectly reasonable explanation, although the above link doesn't make it easy to visualize. Neither does Wikipedia. The best I can make of it is that they were formed by water seeping into metamorphic rock, which carved a round opening before the minerals dissolved in it crystallized into a solid sphere. The grooves around it were caused by rock layering over time. If you understand the process as described at either source, maybe you can explain it better. But it wasn't aliens. -via Strange Company

(Image credit: Robert Huggett)


Why the Population Explosion Was a Dud



Fifty years ago, when Baby Boomers were starting families, demographers looked at the statistics and started to panic. World population was growing exponentially, meaning that eventually there would be more people than the world could sustain, and it would happen fast. But, like what happened in China, statistics and extrapolations don't tell the entire story. The exponential growth chart went awry, and population growth slowed. It hasn't gone down globally, but it isn't growing the way it used to. There are many reasons for that, as MinuteEarth explains.

However, fertility rate and population density varies widely by location, and so do demographics. Some countries are already lopsided, with more older people than young people, while other places have plenty of children. While we shouldn't worry about a population explosion, there are challenges in places that go to the extreme in any of those parameters.


The History of Sweetened Condensed Milk

Sweetened condensed milk is a glorious can of processed milk with most of the water removed and replaced with sugar. Combine it with cream cheese (along with eggs and splash of lemon juice) and you've got the world's easiest homemade cheesecake. But don't confuse it with evaporated milk, which doesn't contain sugar. That's a recipe for a nasty cheesecake.

Gail Borden (yes, that Borden) introduced condensed milk in response to the swill milk scandal of the 1850s (covered here at Neatorama in two parts). The idea of milk that would last forever in a can didn't catch on with the public right away, but the US military was interested. American soldiers fighting in the Civil War and World War I were equipped with cans of the high-calorie milk to keep them going. As more people discovered condensed milk, we found more ways to use it. Read how condensed milk came about at Jstor Daily. -via Strange Company

(Image source: Boston Public Library)


All the Amendments to the US Constitution Explained



The US Constitution provides a framework of laws for how the country is run. Its flexibility gives us the ability to add amendments when needed, although the process is anything but easy, requiring a vote of two-thirds of congress plus ratification by three-quarters of the states. So far, we've added 27 of them. The first ten are referred to as the Bill of Rights, which address the reasons we broke away from British rule in the first place. The amendments you don't recall are the ones that only come up when there's a problem in the country that is covered by them (which is why we forget what the Third Amendment is- it never comes up). Amendments that come after the Bill of Rights read like a timeline of American history, marking the Civil War and its aftermath, women's suffrage, Prohibition, the Vietnam draft, etc. The Paint Explainer, who brought us a rundown of logical fallacies, goes over every amendment with a short explanation for each in only eight minutes. There's a one-minute skippable ad at 4:05. -via Laughing Squid


Doing the Riker Maneuver in Valdez, Alaska

Who is the most famous person born in Valdez, Alaska? Many would say it's Commander Will Riker of the USS Enterprise, who will be born there in the year 2335. A group of Star Trek fans, headed by Valdez native Cameron Harrison, want to erect a bronze memorial statue of Riker and a commemorative plaque to mark his hometown. They even formed a nonprofit organization called Riker Maneuver to enlist public support. They already have the backing of Paramount, the company that owns Star Trek. Harrison says he spoke to Jonathan Frakes, who portrayed Riker, at Comic-Con and says he is all for it.

The design of the statue will include a bench for fans to relax on, while Riker himself is in a position to perform his iconic method of sitting down, which has been dubbed the Riker Maneuver. Fans will also be able to mimic the pose beside him for photographs. Riker Maneuver has filed plans with the Valdez Parks and Recreation Department, and are optimistically awaiting approval, after which they can begin to raise the $125,000 needed for the memorial. Parks director Ken Wilson is open to the plan, despite the fact that he's never seen Star Trek: The Next Generation. He's more of a Star Wars fan.  

The commemorative statue would join other Star Trek birthplaces in honoring their future heroes, such as Riverside, Iowa, the hometown of Captain James T. Kirk, and Bloomington, Indiana, where Captain Kathryn Janeway will be born in the 24th century. Even Vulcan, Alberta, displays a bust of Mr. Spock, despite being on the wrong planet.

(Image credit:Riker Maneuver)


All About the Red Light District in Amsterdam

Amsterdam's famous Red Light District doesn't call itself that. To the Dutch, it's De Wallen, or the Wall. The term "red light district" is mainly to tell you what's going on there, and that's sex work (called "pleasure work" here), which has only been legal in the Netherlands since 2000, and only between consenting adults. The wares in the city's windows came about because of a legal loophole. But the history of the area goes back hundreds of years. Everyone knew about it, but police turned a blind eye because it was considered a necessary evil and there was a lot of money to be made, you know, like in the rest of the world. Now that pleasure work is legal, De Wallen is globally famous, and even more money is made from tourists who just want to be there and see it. The pleasure workers are regulated, pay taxes, and belong to a union, but there are still businesses that operate under the radar illegally. And the neighborhood's history has plenty of seedy episodes. Weird History tells us all about Amsterdam's Red Light District. This video is not explicit, but it's probably not safe for your workplace.


The Impending Lonely Death of Voyager 1

The space probe Voyager 1 was launched in 1977 on a three-year mission to explore the outer planets of the solar system. The spacecraft was not expected to remain functional for more than five years maximum. Yet Voyager traveled on, and has been relaying data to earth for more than 46 years. It is now in interstellar space, more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from earth.

But as amazing as Voyager's performance has been, nothing lasts forever. The space probe has been glitching for the past two years, and NASA is having a hard time pinpointing the problem. For one thing, it takes 22 hours for signals to reach the probe, and just as long for data to be sent back. For another, the probe is running on computer programming from 1977, and NASA has very few surviving engineers familiar with it.

So Voyager may be on its last legs, even as it continues its eternal trajectory away from earth. The achievements of the probe have been so numerous you could read about it for days (see Wikipedia). But to get an overall sense of what Voyager 1's 46 years of service really means, you can read an almost poetic tribute to the little probe that could at Crooked Timber. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: NASA/JPL)


If Classic Composers Wrote the Super Mario Bros. Theme

The best known music composers of history all had their own styles, but unless you are an avid classical music fan, you might not know those styles all that well because they are all expressed in different songs. We just know the songs. Pianist Nahre Sol knows the particulars of the great composers of the past. She illustrates their differences by playing the same song, The Super Marios Bros. Theme, which we all know well, in the distinctive styles of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Franz Liszt, Rachmaninoff, and George Gershwin. Sol adjusted the song somewhat to fit into each style, but if you listen closely, it's all the same basic tune. You'll need to watch as well as listen, as the tunes are annotated, rather amusingly. I was waiting for Rachmaninoff because you know he had big hands. And she refers to those hands when the time comes! -via Laughing Squid


Paul McCartney's Lost Bass Guitar Found 50 Years Later

Paul McCartney bought a Höfner 500/1 bass guitar in Hamburg, Germany, in 1961, for just £30. He used it to record the Beatles' first two albums. McCartney played it on their first TV appearance in Britain, and on The Ed Sullivan Show in the US. The violin-shaped guitar became known as the Höfner Beatle bass. Then sometime after the Beatles broke up, it just disappeared.

A group of Beatles fans organized a project called The Lost Bass in 2018 with the aim of finding McCartney's guitar. There was a lot of interest, but no real leads until two British journalists, Scott and Naomi Jones, got involved. With their help, The Lost Bass reached thousands of people, including some who had bits of real information. A sound engineer revealed that the bass had been stolen from an equipment van in October of 1972. Every clue led to more clues, and with proper publicity, the story of the lost guitar got to just the right people who could help. And in September of last year, an anonymous person reached out to Paul McCartney's company and then returned the bass! The Höfner was authenticated as the same guitar McCartney purchased in 1961. It sustained some damage, but can be repaired. Read how the project led to the bass guitar recovery more than 50 years after it was last seen.


The Aftermath of a Nuclear War Will Be Worse Than the War

We all know that the only way to win a nuclear war is to avoid having one. That's the idea behind mutually assured destruction, or MAD. That acronym sounds more like you'd have to be a complete madman to use modern nuclear bombs (much larger than those used in World War II) against anyone. While it might make you feel better to be far away from potential targets, or even in a country that no one pays attention to, that doesn't mean that you'll be safe. Even if you avoid radioactive fallout, the changes in earth's atmosphere after the war would lead to nuclear winter, drought, and famine for the entire planet, not to mention more wars over resources. Kurzgesagt lays out several scenarios and the possible death tolls, which are staggering. The good news is that the earth will recover in a decade or so, with or without us. This video is only 9:40; the rest is an ad.


The Unsolved Mystery of Ambrose Small's Disappearance

Ambrose Small was one of Toronto's wealthiest men. He owned more than 30 theaters in Ontario where one could see all kinds of live performances in the early 20th century. In 1919, the 53-year-old Small was ready to retire, possibly because he saw the future of live performances going away thanks to movies. He arranged to sell all his theaters for $1.7 million, which would be worth $30 million today. But as soon as he wrapped up the deal and deposited a million dollars in his bank, he disappeared.

Small's wife didn't report him missing. Weeks later, one of his employees did, and the police were all over the case, and the newspapers were as well. But they found nothing. One of Small's employees, John Doughty, left town with $105,000 in bonds and was later captured and tried for theft, but police never found any evidence tying him to Small's disappearance. Small's sisters blamed his wife, and even fabricated evidence against her, which may have been more about inheritance money than actual suspicion. The strangest part of the story was a man who showed up in Des Moines, Iowa, two years later that some thought might have been Small.

But more than 100 years later, no one knows what actually happened to Ambrose Small. Read about the case and its fallout at Mental Floss.

(Image credit: Toronto Star)


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