Miss Cellania's Blog Posts

12 Impressive Chopsticks



Chopsticks can be just two plain sticks, or they could be works of art, clever conversation pieces, or engineered to make eating simpler. You'll find some of each (except for the plain sticks) in a roundup by our own Jill Harness at Oddee. The chopsticks shown make learning to use them easy and fun for kids! Link

Don't Waste That Pumpkin!

Pure Organic has an infographic with several ideas for what to do with your Jack-o-Lantern after Halloween. How about giving it to the birds?
Instead of throwing your pumpkin away, fill it with bird seed and let it serve as a feeder for birds. When it starts to get soft then compost it or refill with seeds and throw it into the woods.

I normally just paint ours for Halloween, so I can cook it later. Link -via Buzzfeed

Miniature Chemistry Lab



The tallest piece in this set is only three inches tall! Kiva Ford makes hand-blown miniatures of many types of glassware and jewelry. Personally, I am a sucker for the cobalt blue glass creations. See more at the Etsy shop. Link -via Evil Mad Linkblog

Taikhar Chuluu

A large rock stands out in the middle of a plain in Mongolia. The Taikhar chuluu is covered with inscriptions dating back as far as Turkic rule in Mongolia. Those inscriptions were followed by more in the Mongol language, then Tibetan, and even more modern graffiti.
Of course, the rock itself did not come here by itself, the legend says. Long time ago there lived a hero here called Bökebilig (“Strong and wise”). Suddenly a large snake started to come out from under the earth. Bökebilig did not like this, and he pushed back the snake from where it came, and then he closed the mouth of its cave with this rock which has been standing here ever since. Not far from the rock there is a small mountain called Altan sandali (“Golden throne”), of which tradition says that Bökebilig took a rest on it, while washing his hands in the nearby Tamir river.

Link

Airport Camping



Allie Brosch, the mastermind behind Hyperbole and a Half, sends out entertaining but infrequent Tweets. This one was illustrated as a Twaggie, which (like all Twaggies) can be made into a t-shirt if you like. Link

Human Oil (and Other Hoaxes)

The following is an article from Uncle John's Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader.

These hoaxes are so absurd, it's hard to believe that anyone was fooled ...but lots of people were.

WHAT A HELLHOLE

The Story: In early 1990, the Trinity Broadcasting Network reported that Russian geologists on Siberia's Kola Peninsula had discovered Hell. They were using a giant drill, said TBN, to test how deep into the Earth they could reach. In November 1989, nine miles into the ground, the drill suddenly stopped spinning -it had hit air. The team lowered a thermometer into the hole. The temperature inside was 2,200°F -five times as hot as it should have been at that depth. They lowered a microphone down to record the sounds of shifting plates, and heard human screams. Then a black, spectral figure in the shape of a bat screeched and flew out of the hole.

The Hoax: TBN claimed (on the air) that the source for the story was Ammennusatia, "Finland's Most Respected Newspaper." They'd gotten the article from a Texas minister who sent it in, claiming it was from Finland's top scientific journal. Actually, Ammennusatia is a paranormal newsletter (it is from Finland). They got the story from a staffer who wrote it from memory after having read it in Etela Soumen, another Finnish newspaper, which ran the piece in a section where readers were invited to publish anything they liked -including fiction. Someone had sent the story to Etela Soumen after reading it an another weird Finnish newsletter called Vaeltajat. That paper got it from an obscure American religious newsletter called Jewels of Jericho, which had completely made it up. TBN reported the story without bothering to find out if it was true. A few months later, they announced that because of the story, 3,000 people had converted to Christianity. Ironically, the story was rooted in fact: from 1970 to 1989, Soviet scientists were involved in a project called the Kola Superdeep Borehole. The point was to drill as deep into the Earth as possible. They got about 7.6 miles in, but never encountered any fiery air holes, human scream, or ghostly bats.

VIVOLEUM FOR EVERYONE!

The Story: At the 2007 Gas and Oil Exhibition, Canada's largest annual oil-industry convention, a National Petroleum Council representative named Shepard Wolff and an Exxon Mobile executive, Florian Osenberg, unveiled "Vivoleum" -a revolutionary process that turned human flesh into gasoline (very handy, should oil reserves ever dry up). The executives then played a film about a deceased Exxon janitor who had volunteered to be turned into Vivoleum, and passed out candles to be lit in the janitor's memory. That's when they announced that the candles were the janitor- transformed by Vivoleum.

The Hoax: After the two men passed out the "human candles," the event's organizers realized that "Wolff" and "Osenberg" were phonies.They were really Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno, two members of the Yes Men, an anti-consumerism group that stages high-profiles stunts to embarrass corporations with poor environmental or human rights records. Bichlbaum and Bonanno had set up a fake Exxon website (vivoluem.com), through which they got themselves invited to the Oil Exposition. Convention organizers threw them out and threatened to have them arrested. A few days later, Exxon demanded they shut down the Vivoleum site. They declined, saying it was a parody and thus protected under the First Amendment. (The web site has since shut down.)

MOSTLY CLOUDY

The Story: On a Sunday morning in June 2007, CT2, a television station in the Czech Republic, was airing a weather update. As weather stats scrolled along the bottom of the screen, a camera panned the country's scenic Krkonose Mountains. Suddenly, off in the distance, a fiery mushroom cloud filled the sky. The screen went black -the Czech Republic had just been nuked.


(YouTube link)

The Hoax: A Czech performance art group called Initiative Ztohoven had hacked into CT2's feed and replaced it with its own footage -undetectably similar ...up until the bomb part. The mushroom cloud was just simple video editing done on a computer. After the initial blackout, CT2 came back on the air to reassure viewers they they weren't under attack. Members of Initiative Ztohoven are under investigation by the Czech government and may face terrorism charges.

___________________

This article was reprinted with permission from Uncle John's Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader.

Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.

If you like Neatorama, you'll love the Bathroom Reader Institute's books - go ahead and check 'em out!


House Sings Thriller







(YouTube link)

Halloween home decorations have come a long way. See the other songs programmed for this house at the YouTube channel. I have to wonder what the neighbors think! -via Metafilter


How Different Age Groups Celebrate Halloween

Matthew Inman at The Oatmeal made a chart of how different age groups celebrate Halloween. I have experienced all these phases, with the difference that when I was younger, teenagers had lots more fun! Link -via Geeks Are Sexy


The Garden of the Monsters



Pier Francesco Orsini, a 16th-century mercenary and nobleman, built a garden of huge sculpted monsters and other fantasy figures at his estate in Bomarzo, Italy. You'll find the story of this remarkable project and more pictures at Kuriositas. Link

(Image credit: Flickr user zak mc)

Practice Makes Perfect

(YouTube link)

A young owl practices pouncing on imaginary prey. Or else he just wants to show off how cute he is! -via Arbroath


Make Me Zombie

You don't have to do any artwork yourself with this zombie generator -just upload your picture and it will turn you into a zombie! Well, at least your picture. This one is me, zombified. Link -via the Presurfer


This Week at Neatorama

This week, Neatorama was proud to roll out our new literary sub-blog BitLit, where you can enjoy new fiction from all kinds of contributors! We started with three offerings, all described in this post. Check in for new chapters of Frostbite and Trivial Pursuits {?} posted every day, and read the entire short story Nomen Ludi.

Jill Harness was busy this week, again rounding up the best Halloween information and entertainment for you in Neatorama’s Halloween Decoration Geekstravaganza, as well as 12 Gross Candies Perfect For Trick or Treaters, and the post 10 Controversial Horror Movies For Halloween.

We had more Halloweeny goodness from Uncle John's Bathroom Reader in Famous Trials: The Witches of Salem, and The Annals of Improbable Research brought us Yummy Mummies for Good Health.

Halloween wasn't the only thing going on. John Farrier gave us 10 Facts You Might Not Know about Babylon 5.

Jill said Happy Birthday, Teddy Roosevelt! on what would have been the president's 152nd birthday Wednesday

Really, Really Dumb Moments in Sports came to us from the new issue of mental_floss magazine.

I reported on 10 Things I Learned at BlogWorld in Las Vegas.

Alex is asking for your comments and suggestions in the post How Should We Improve Blogging Diversity on Neatorama?

If you didn't have time to try it out earlier, spend some downtime this weekend playing with Neato-Puzzle #4.

In the What Is It? game we posted on Thursday, t-shirts go to just a guess who correctly guessed that the object is a carpet stretcher, and to e7c for the funniest guess: George Washington's Halloween costume's vampire denture!

Steven Johnson drew a Halloween edition of the Name That Weird Invention! contest. T-shirts from the NeatoShop go to Barking Bud, who called it a Mortalcycle, and to John P, who came up with the name Moto-Crossbones by Bone-Daddy Bikes, which comes in "his and hearse models". Honorable mentions: Elizabeth (Bone Chopper), Hannah (Tyred of Life), Saudia (Nutcracker), Heather B (Dirt Nap Bike), deathbyawesomeness (diecycle), Sasha (BMXoskelton), and ladybuggs (The Grim Chopper).

As a special treat, we ran a second round of Name That Weird Invention! on Friday. You can still enter that contest for a couple more days.

We also saw a trick-or-treat version of Mal and Chad's Fill in the Bubble Frenzy. The winning entry is from Matt, who said That's the last time I try the "Knock knock. Who's there? Bananna." joke! Matt, however, did not select a t-shirt.

Congratulations also to Holly Werra and Mark Dziak, who won t-shirts from the NeatoShop in the How Did You Know? contest that Neatorama sponsored this week at mental_floss.

We had four winners in the Star Wars giveaway: Heather Muise, David Alexander LaPierre, @Chiisexy and @raaven. What? You didn't know we were doing a Star Wars giveaway until it was over? That's because it was a social media giveaway. You'll be in on the next such giveaway if you follow Neatorama on Facebook and Twitter!

Have a great Halloween!

The War on Suffrage

It's hard to believe today, but less than 100 years ago, there was a great debate about whether women should be able to vote. The anti-suffragists declared that voting women would abandon their families, they would become ugly and mean, and society would collapse.
This attitude was reflected in the suffragette caricatures drawn in newspapers and magazines. According to Tickner, depictions of spinster suffragettes were normally slender in a time when curves were celebrated; their faces likewise were severe and gaunt, “the lines of disappointment etched deep by the illustrator’s pen.” The spinster suffragette’s clothes and physical appearance emphasize that she is a failed woman and wannabe man. The lady wants to vote because she couldn’t get a date.

Read more about the anti-suffrage movement and see more cartoons and caricatures from the debate at mental_floss. Link

Prequel to The Birds


(YouTube link)

Finally, a film that explains everything! This trailer for a prequel to the Alfred Hitchcock horror classic The Birds comes from NYSUfilms. -via b3ta


Star Wars Retro Travel Posters



Illustrator Steve Thomas created a series of beautiful retro posters for locations, transportation facilities, and events featured in the Star Wars movies. They may be available to purchase as prints soon! Link -via Buzzfeed

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Profile for Miss Cellania

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