Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

Never Before Seen Footage from The Empire Strikes Back

Let's go four decades back in time, back the set of the best Star Wars movie, The Empire Strikes Back. Good Morning America premiered almost seven minutes of footage from the film set, from the difficult filming of the ice planet Hoth to lightsaber training.

A majority of the clips are being seen publicly for the first time, and include many lighthearted moments shot during production featuring lead actors Mark Hamill (Skywalker), Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia) and Harrison Ford (Han Solo).

In 1979, cameras captured Hamill and the crew on location in Finse, Norway,—doubling as the planet Hoth— during a major snowstorm that hampered the production. Wearing a blue crew jacket with a name tag that reads “HEY YOU," Hamill jokingly invents the Tautaun Dance, named after the planet’s furry lizards.

“Three steps like this, and then you fall over,” Hamill says with a laugh.

-via The Mary Sue


An Advent Calendar of Christmas Calamities

Twitter user @Pandamoanimum put together an Advent calendar to spread joy and laughter for the holidays. Or despair, who knows, your mileage may vary. Each day she posts a new video to the thread showing how things go hilariously wrong at Christmastime. Some are Christmas classics that you haven't seen in years; others will be new to you, but each one is aimed at making you giggle. There are 15 days to catch up with so far. Check back for daily updates. -via Everlasting Blort


What the Pandemic Christmas of 1918 Looked Like

By the time the Christmas season of 1918 rolled around, the influenza pandemic had raged around the US for months. Cases were going down in some areas, up in others. How could people keep the Christmas spirit and still stay safe? Kenneth C. Davis, who wrote a book about the pandemic, More Deadly than War, gives us a look at Christmas 1918. As now, there was little federal oversight, and local public safety regulations varied widely.  

Davis says San Francisco took it quite seriously, implementing a strong mask mandate in the fall as well as measures that’d be described today as social distancing. After cases rose sharply in mid-October, the city locked down harshly; the measures worked to keep the flu at bay and, a month later, the city reopened and dropped the mask mandate. But the flu was not done with the city yet. Come Christmastime, Davis says, the cases were again on the rise, and residents, having finally escaped from the pandemic shutdown, were not eager to go back.

“San Francisco wanted to institute the mask rule again but people resisted,” he says.

In other places, people decried the cancellation of church services for the holiday, and store owners were desperate to stay open and make sales. So really, things were not all that different in 1918. And 675,000 Americans died of the flu. Read about the pandemic Christmas of 1918 at Smithsonian.


An Honest Trailer for Lost



If you were watching TV at all between 2006 and 2010, you are probably familiar with Lost. The series started out promisingly, with a plane crash and a group of survivors on a mysterious island. But this drama was no Gilligan's Island. The series was a sensation and was constantly discussed by fans, but it just got weirder and weirder as the series was renewed year after year. By the time Lost ended, it made no sense whatsoever. Screen Junkies takes a closer look at Lost in this Honest Trailer.


2020 News Headlines, Generated by AI

Janelle Shane can generate the weirdest things with artificial intelligence. As 2020 draws to a close, readers have suggested that she train a neural network on the year's headlines and see if the algorithm can come up with anything to compare. I mean, you have to admit that the news this year was unusually unusual. These are examples of real-world headlines.

Mysterious alien-like monolith discovered in Utah desert
What you need to know about ‘murder hornets’
The Mystery of The Platypus Deepens With The Discovery of Its Biofluorescent Fur
Famous Vienna hotel turns to drive-in cake

So Shane took up the challenge, although she admits that she tends to read more news about the natural world, so that may affect the type of headlines generated. She probably just avoided political news. Still, the results are spectacular.

Swarming bears are given deadly slingshots by Russian hunters
Good news / Bad news about crows in Burlington schools
When Killer Orchids Attack: How the Deadly Corpse Orchid Is Turning Up in U.S. Backyards
Massive radioactive sinkhole continues to grow in Russia
Why scientists believe the 'Killer Raccoons of the Pacific Northwest’ are responsible for this kill
Lycoperdons, the tiny deadly puffballs, are on the march again
From deep in the Earth, darkness “boils” to the surface
A sassy tardigrade previews new Doctor Who

That's just the beginning. Read more 2020 headlines generated by artificial intelligence at AI Weirdness. -via Fark


The Longest Photographic Exposure Ever

When she was working on her master's in fine art at the University of Hertfordshire, Regina Valkenborgh made a pinhole camera out of a beer can. She attached it to a telescope at the university's observatory, and then forgot about it. That was in 2012. This year, the can was removed by David Campbell, technical officer at the observatory. Inside was photographic paper that had recorded the path of the sun 2,953 times! It had been exposed for eight years and one month.

Regina Valkenborgh said: “It was a stroke of luck that the picture was left untouched, to be saved by David after all these years. I had tried this technique a couple of times at the Observatory before, but the photographs were often ruined by moisture and the photographic paper curled up. I hadn’t intended to capture an exposure for this length of time and to my surprise, it had survived. It could be one of, if not the, longest exposures in existence.”

-via Kottke


"The Great Wave off Kanagawa" in LEGO

How do you make a classical artwork both 3-dimensional and pixelated? You build it in LEGO blocks! Professional LEGO artist Jumpei Mitsui has completed a recreation of the renowned woodblock print "The Great Wave off Kanagawa" by Hokusai.

The work has been permanently installed at the Hankyu Brick Museum in Osaka. See more pictures at Brick Fanatics. -via Boing Boing


Solar Eclipse Seen From Space

On Monday morning, people near the southern tip of South America experienced the only solar eclipse of 2020. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite caught images of the moon's shadow sweeping across the continent, blocking out the sun.

People in areas where the outer part of the moon's shadow falls, called the penumbra, see a partial solar eclipse. For today's eclipse, that included much of South America as well as a small portion of Africa's southwest coast. If the sun were a little bit farther from the Earth, there would be what's called an annular solar eclipse, in which the moon appears to not block the entire sun and a ring of the sun is still visible. An annular solar eclipse was visible in parts of Africa and Asia in June.

Read more about the eclipse and see another video from space at Mashable.


Every Movie Cough

The website Every Movie Cough is "The world's most complete collection of cinematic coughs (and sneezes)." Mike Lacher and Jason Eppink put a lot of work into this compilation.

Since the beginning of motion pictures, filmmakers have trained their cameras at whooping, wheezing, sneezing, sniffling, hacking humans. Some of these expulsions are pivotal to the narrative. Many are purely incidental. But today, they all take on a new significance as vectors for disease. That’s why we believe now is the moment to examine them together in isolation, to see how their depictions vary across history and genre, and to understand how they’re shaped by the lens of the present.

You can see all the collected movie coughs in a mega-video, browse the gallery for individual clips, or check out the categories of gross coughs, drowning coughs, Spielberg coughs, and background coughs, or sneezes by themselves. You can even play a game of identifying the movie from an audio clip of a cough, if you think you're an expert on such things. -via Everlasting Blort


About Master Bedrooms

An article at Jezebel is ostensibly an opinion piece on whether couples should sleep in the same bed in a shared bedroom, but a large part of it is a history of the bedroom in Western civilization. While poor people always slept communally due to lack of space, even wealthy families all slept together in medieval times, including servants. The concept of dedicating a room for sleeping, separate from other household activities, came about only gradually.  

In the 17th century Dutch or English colonial American home, the master bedroom doubled as the entry parlor, where a family kept all its nicest possessions, including the home’s “best bed,” typically reserved for the master and mistress, according to Elizabeth Collins Cromley in “A History of American Beds and Bedrooms.” But by the mid-18th century, upper-class New Englanders had adopted the English trend of adding landings, hallways, and centrally located staircases to homes in order to create dedicated rooms for different purposes. In America, however, for the upper and middle classes, the home’s main bedroom was still connected to rooms used for entertaining, though more private, dedicated spaces for servants and children were often found upstairs. But trends toward individualizing sleeping spaces by decorating children’s rooms according to gender also had the trick of making them more private, and the “Mother’s room” (which was the term for what we now call the master bedroom) was generally tailored to a wife’s needs rather than a husband’s:

The custom of keeping the master bedroom on the first floor will not go away, because children grow up and leave, but the folks left behind get older and don't want to climb stairs. We also learn about the evolution of sleeping configurations, including sleeping porches and arranging a bed halfway out of a window, which is hard to picture. Read about the evolution of the master bedroom at Jezebel.


Giggles the Angry Cat



You may look upon the face of this cat and think he's about to attack you, or at least judge you harshly from a distance. Meet Giggles, who went viral even before he was adopted from a shelter in Akron, Ohio. It was Riggi Rescue who gave him that perverse name. But Giggles only looks angry; according to his new owner, he's really a sweetie. It appears that he has a puffy forehead that gives him a permanently angry look, what has been called "resting bitch face." Read Giggles' story and see a ranked list of his best pictures at Bored Panda. You can keep up with Giggles in his new home at Instagram.


Can You Upload Your Mind & Live Forever?



At the pace our technological advancements are going, it will soon be possible to completely copy a human brain and save it digitally. But if your brain is digitally uploaded and saved, does that mean you are immortal? Would your brain be "you," or just a copy of you? For one thing, we cannot really address whether "consciousness" can be uploaded until we completely define consciousness. And we will not know whether that digital consciousness is actually the same as the person until we try it out. That will lead to questions of personality, existence, and soul, which are more complex than even copying a complete brain. What could possibly go wrong? Well, someone might accidentally delete you, or the power may go out. You might upload to 99% and get stuck. You know how that goes. Or it could be worse. The speculation presented here by Kurzgesagt is fascinating, but if the length of the video bothers you, you can skip the first and last minute. -via Geeks Are Sexy


You Call This Archaeology?

Amid the news that 78-year-old Harrison Ford has signed up for a fifth Indiana Jones movie, it occurs to us that it's about time for Dr. Henry Jones, Jr. to retire from the fictional Marshall College. His colleagues, fellow archaeologists, and movie fans got together on Twitter to propose chapters for a book honoring his work. It's a long thread, considering Jones' varied adventures and issues in the field of archaeology. Proposed entries include:

"Guerrilla tactics and Archaeology, Weapons and combat training for the field archaeologist."

"Collection Management Strategies in the Era of Warehouse 13: A Post-Colonial Analysis"

"That Belongs In A Museum, But Which One?: The Art of Repatriation."

“The importance of stylish fedora wear while fighting Nazis.”

"Why does it have to be Herpetology?"

Read the still-growing Twitter thread, and add your own ideas for the potentially huge volume. -via Metafilter


The Rise and Fall of Peoria's Cookie Monster

Peoria artist Joshua Hawkins was commissioned to paint a mural in Peoria, Illinois. The work had to be completed over Thanksgiving weekend, and he would be well paid. The requested art was of Sesame Street's Cookie Monster, holding a cookie with the caption "Peace, Land, and Cookies" in Russian. So Hawkins did the work, on a building owned by Nate Comte.

Nate Comte, the owner of a commercial building at 1301 NE Adams in Peoria, Illinois, was none too pleased to show up there shortly after Thanksgiving to find a giant Cookie Monster mural on the side of the place, stretching about 30 feet long and 16 feet high. He called up local artist Joshua Hawkins, who had, with the help of some friends, painted the mural over the holiday weekend.

“Are you the one that painted my f*ckin’ building?” he demanded to know, in Hawkins’s recollection. (Comte had gotten the artist’s number from business cards he handed out to passersby during the project.)

Hawkins was shocked. As far as he knew, it was Comte who had commissioned the mural in the first place.

The mystery man who had hired Hawkins had said he was Comte, and Hawkins had been paid in full. The real Comte was so mad that he quickly painted over the mural, so it only existed for about a week. However, art lovers of Peoria and elsewhere have turned the now-white wall into a shrine, mourning the loss of Cookie Monster. There was also backlash against Comte. Comte now plans to commission a local artist to paint a different mural on the wall. We still don't know who paid for the first mural. -via Metafilter

(Image credit: Joshua Hawkins)


An Icy Night in Ukraine

Winter is always fun from r/funny

Earlier this week, Kiev had an ice storm which left a coating on everything, including roads, sidewalks, and ramps. Security cameras caught people trying to negotiate the perils of ice-covered bricks, particularly one woman who put in an inordinate amount of effort before giving in. In our next foreign aid package, we need to include salt and YakTrax. Click on the image above to start the video. -via reddit


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