The war-torn history of Cambodia in the 20th century is told in the ruins of a purpose-built town. Bokor Hill Station was designed as a retreat for French colonists. Of course, it was built by Cambodian labor, with hundreds of deaths among them during the construction. Bokor Hill Station, centered around the Palace Hotel and Casino, was completed in 1925, but then abandoned in the late 1940s as the colonial French saw the end of their rule. In the 1950s, elite Cambodians moved in. They left in the 1970s as the Khmer Rouge moved in. They stayed through a war with Vietnam in the '80s. But by then, Bokor Hill Station had fallen into ruin. Some Cambodians believe it should remain in ruins as a monument to its history, while others think it should be restored to its former glory, or something close. Meanwhile, tourists go to Bokor Hill Station to take pictures, which you can see at Kuriositas.
(Image credit: Flickr user michaël stone)
Miss Cellania's Blog Posts
Your brain is a computer, you've got logic in your soul, Mr. Spock.
John C. Worsley (previously at Neatorama) is back with another master edit celebrating Christmas with Star Trek. This time, the characters from Starfleet sing "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" except it's targeted to our other favorite green-blooded fictional character. The video is taken from Star Trek: The Animated Series, while the audio clips are taken from wherever they were. The lyrics follow the original song except in places where something else would work better. I can't imagine how much work goes into one of these songs, but I, for one, am glad he took the time. -via Metafilter
Check out Worsley's Star Trek Christmas playlist.
My late mother-in-law was quite superstitious. Every New Year's Day, she waited by the phone, hoping that the first person to call her would be a man. If a woman called first, the year would be a disaster. She believed the same about people coming to her door, although that was less likely to happen than getting a telephone call. My husband took on the duty of calling her early in the morning, just to set her mind at ease (no matter how late we stayed up). He also called the other people in the family who believed in this tradition, and at a respectable hour, we'd go see them, always making sure I was still messing with the car or something when the door was answered. I'd never heard of this superstition before then, but it appears to be one, or maybe two, of the Victorian New Year customs in a list from Mental Floss.
The New Year is a time not only for for parties, but for omens of how the year ahead will go. Most of the traditions listed are methods for predicting the future, or at least getting a clue as to whether it will be good or bad. But there's a few that grew out of the party mode, and were dropped because they were more trouble than they were worth. I'm particularly thinking of the ridiculous New Year pie, which you can read about at Mental Floss. -via Strange Company
Enjoy a new Christmas song by Ingrid Michaelson featuring Zooey Deschanel called "Merry Christmas, Happy New Year." This is from her album Songs for the Season.
Also enjoy the video, in which Mr. Needlefelted Rabbit brings home a Christmas tree while Mrs. Needlefelted Rabbit bakes Christmas cookies. They are joined by plenty of woodland creatures celebrating the season. This sweet video was directed by Phoebe Wall and animator and fiber artist Andrea Love (previously at Neatorama). -via Nag on the Lake
Merry Christmas from all of us at Neatorama!
For Christmas, The Hatching Cat has strung together similar stories in several animals posts with holiday themes. One is a list of cats who saved lives in New York around the holiday season between the years of 1904 and 1932. The list has six stories about six cats who saved the lives of a dozen people, plus four kittens. One story involves Patches, pictured here. Patches hung around a building and was owned by no one, until that fateful day during the Christmas season of 1912, when Patches jumped up on the shoulders of Daniel De Lena, the building resident who was the cat's worst enemy.
According to the New York Press, one morning Patches jumped on Daniel’s shoulder and then kept running to and from a rear window while excitedly meowing. At first, Daniel kicked at Patches and tried to shoo the cat away.
But finally, the cat’s persistency paid off. When Daniel got up to look out the first-floor window, he saw that the rear of the building was in flames. He ran through the four-story brick building, waking several people who lived and worked there.
De Lena afterward became Patches' best friend, and even adopted the hero cat. Read the rest of Patches' story and those of five other hero cats at The Hatching Cat. -via Strange Company
See also: Christmas stories of hero dogs and hero horses.
A lamprey is a jawless fish that sports a sucker full of teeth for a mouth. Many lamprey species will latch onto another fish and feed on its blood. While that may seem thoroughly unpleasant, word is that they are pretty tasty themselves. In the Middle Ages, lamprey was a dish restricted to the rich, or even royalty, as Portuguese King João made the fishing of lampreys without permission illegal with a penalty of death. The fish was so prestigious, those who couldn't indulge in lamprey made a not-so-reasonable facsimile by creating a dessert shaped like a lamprey made of sugar and eggs. This is lampreia de ovos, a recipe that survives today as a Christmas tradition in Portugal.
Lampreia de ovos was more available than the fish, but it was still expensive due to the number of eggs and the expertise required to make it. Today you can buy mass-produced lampreia de ovos, but those that are hand-made by experienced chefs are coveted and expensive. That said, if you think your cooking skills are up to it, you can find a recipe at Atlas Obscura, along with the history of lampreia de ovos.
In 1963, Bing Crosby got another big Christmas hit with "Do You Hear What I Hear?" The song was notable for being new but sounding like a classic Christmas carol. Hundreds of other artists recorded it in the decades that followed. It tells the story of how the news of a newborn messiah spread across the land. But the inspiration for the song is a very different story.
In October of 1962, Cuba and American warships faced each other in teh Caribbean over American demands that the Soviet Union remove its intercontinental ballistic missiles from Cuba. The Cuban Missile Crisis, as it came to be known, lasted for about five weeks and scared the wits out of everyday people. It was during this time that composer Noël Regney was charged with writing a Christmas song that would be a B-side. He wrote the lyrics and then his wife Gloria Shayne wrote the music. The simple lyrics drew inspiration from the contrast between innocent babies Regney saw on the street and the global crisis unfolding in the news. "A star dancing in the night with a tail as big as a kite" is a direct reference to an incoming missile. Read how the Cuban Missile Crisis gave us a beloved Christmas carol at Smithsonian.
This big boat looks like Noah's ark, and likewise it was constructed to sail only once, and not even on the ocean. Back before Russia had railroads, they developed a method of moving timber from the forests to the cities on the Volga and Kama rivers. They built these huge boats called belyanas from the timber, floated them downriver, and then disassembled them as their cargo. Oh yeah, there's plenty more timber inside.
The belyanas were constructed without any tar as waterproofing, and only in the middle of the 19th century did they even begin to use nails. The logs, beams, and planks were tied together for the trip. Once they arrived at a port city, the lumber was sold to fuel steamships and heat homes. The cabins on the deck that housed the crew were sold whole as houses. What I'd like to know was how the crew made it back up to the forests afterward. Read about the belyanas of Russia and see more pictures at Amusing Planet.
Charles Dickens gave us the classic tale of Christmas joy and generosity, along with ghosts, in his story A Christmas Carol. He also gave us a classic villain in Ebenezer Scrooge, a mean and miserly type we've all known at some time in our lives. The greatest literary characters are drawn from real life, and there has been plenty of study on who inspired the Scrooge character.
Dickens drew from more than one real person to make Scrooge. Literary scholars believe that his miserly ways came from member of parliament John Elwes, who lived in the previous century and was well-documented in a bestselling biography that Dickens would have no doubt read.
The inspiration of the character's name came from the very real Ebenezer Lennox Scroggie, who died in 1836, and was unknown to Dickens. How that happened is a bit weird. Read about Scroggie and Elwes and how they contributed to the character of Ebenezer Scrooge at BBC. -via Damn Interesting
Here's a profession that's right up there with mattress tester. A team of expert ham sniffers are employed by the Spanish company Cinco Jotas. They specializes in very expensive premium quality acorn-fed Iberian hams. The ham sniffers are quality control workers who can appraise the quality of a ham just by smell. But they've been overworked lately due to increased demand.
Manuel Vega Domínguez has been sniffing hams since 1998, and in normal times will sniff around 200 hams a day, but this holiday season, he's up to 800 a day, which he refers to as "at the limit of human possibility." But he will soldier on. Read about the busy ham sniffers at Thrillist.
-via reddit
A Steller's sea eagle — a very-rare, muppet-ass looking bird native to Asia — has been spotted in Massachusetts! For more info, check out @TheBirdist https://t.co/bmsEziktIw pic.twitter.com/JTjEVQFMl3
— Wild City NYC (@wildcitynyc) December 21, 2021
Every year, birdwatchers all over spent time between December 14 to January 5 to take part in the Christmas Bird Count. The data they contribute helps to track the fates of thousands of bird species. What would it take for Nick Lund, blogger at The Birdist and advocacy and outreach manager for Maine Audubon, to abandon the Christmas Bird Count? A very rare bird sighting.
The Steller's sea eagle is the largest eagle on earth. Its wingspan can be as much as eight feet! But the Steeler's sea eagle is native to northeastern Asia, mainly Siberia, Japan, Korea, and occasionally coastal Alaska. They never wander into the continental US. But one eagle appears to have gone rogue. It was spotted in inland Alaska, then in Texas, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and then in Massachusetts. Lund, in Maine, heard about it on Monday, immediately ditched the Christmas Bird Count, picked up a few birder buddies, and drove another two hours to Massachusetts to see the eagle.
Bird enthusiasts were texting and alerting each other about the bird's location, and Lund caught up with it at Dighton Rock State Park. By noon, there were 200 or so birders set up with cameras to see the single specimen of the Steller's sea eagle, who was just chilling with some smaller bald eagles. For a birdwatcher this is like finding the Holy Grail. The story is delightful because the birders were so excited, and their enthusiasm for something we know nothing about is contagious. Read about the sighting and the banzai rush to see this bird at The Birdist. -via Metafilter
Christmas comes with a lot of stories, folklore, and media characters. Most of these characters have nothing to do with each other. There's baby Jesus, of course, and Santa Claus, but also Krampus, Rudolph, Belsnickel, the Grinch, Scrooge, the Little Drummer Boy, Yukon Cornelius, Zwarte Piet, Elf on the Shelf, the Yule Cat, Dominick The Donkey, and for some reason a Nutcracker, among others. Come up with a new Christmas character, and if you're lucky you can make tons of money. Janelle Shane is not looking to make tons of money, but to train artificial intelligence algorithms. Her latest project is generating new Christmas entities. She fed a few existing characters into the neural network, and out came three Christmas weasels. But that's not all. Go to Shane's site, AI Weirdness, to meet the Hostile Choir, Chrishmak, the Blop, and more brand new, uh, things we can write a Christmas story around.
This may technically be an ad from Chevrolet, but it's a story that serves as the company's holiday greeting. It involves a 1966 Chevy Impala that hadn't been driven for quite some time. You'll figure out why pretty quickly, and then it's time to get your hankie out.
This video is based on a true story, according the Chevy. Everyone will be able to relate to at least one thing in the video. Anywhere this video is posted, it brings out stories of beloved cars in someone's past, or in a loved one's past. It doesn't have to be a Chevy. -via Fark
#MikesMerryMovieChallenge
— filmanthropic (@filmanthropica) December 11, 2021
December 11: favorite song in a holiday movie
I’ll be man enough to admit that I get a little misty-eyed once I hear “Christmas Time is Here” from 1965’s “A Charlie Brown Christmas” when watching it. pic.twitter.com/J8WDEUDuoh
The song in its original version has nothing to do with Christmas. What you think may be jingle bells are brushes on a snare drum. It's a jazz tune that's quite slow and melancholy. But when we hear it, we know it's Christmas, because "Christmas Time is Here" played through a large part of A Charlie Brown Christmas, the beloved 1965 Peanuts TV special we all know and love.
The song was written and performed by Vince Guaraldi, a jazz musician who'd hit the charts with "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" a few years earlier. Lee Mendelson heard the song and got Guaraldi to do the music for A Charlie Brown Christmas. Guaraldi constructed a slow jazz instrumental, which was quite innovative for a children's television show at the time. Mendelson thought it needed lyrics, which he wrote and arranged for a children's choir to sing. Even with cheery lyrics, the song makes Christmas seem somewhat sad and disappointing, which is quite in line with the plot of A Charlie Brown Christmas. Read the story of how the song came about and why we automatically get nostalgic when we hear it, at Mel magazine.
How the Grinch Stole Christmas is a classic Dr. Seuss story first published in 1957. It was made into a Christmas television special in 1966 and two feature films in 2000 and 2018, among other spinoffs featuring the Grinch. This Honest Trailer is about the 2000 film version starring Jim Carrey as the Grinch. It was a huge hit, and probably the most familiar version of the story to the internet generation. As Screen Junkies reveals, this movie was less Dr. Seuss and more Ron Howard and Jim Carrey. The basic story is there, but stretched out to feature length by adding lots of violence and sexual innuendo. Is it really? I've never seen the movie. After watching this Honest Trailer, I don't have the desire to, either.