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2012/06/09

Neatorama

Neatorama


Making Art With LED-Adorned Snails

Posted: 09 Jun 2012 03:57 AM PDT

(Video Link)

It might look like these snails are wandering around all willy-nilly, but if you watch all the way to the end of the video you’ll realize there’s a method to this silly madness.

The Weird & Wonderful Wartime Cartoons of Dr. Seuss

Posted: 09 Jun 2012 02:53 AM PDT

How would you illustrate the threat of Nazism in the 1940′s? No matter how crazy your ideas, they probably wouldn’t be as wacky as these Dr. Seuss cartoons as they almost certainly wouldn’t be as cool-looking.

Linkart Via io9

Gir Has Something To Ask You

Posted: 09 Jun 2012 01:48 AM PDT

If you like Invader Zim, then you’ll immediately recognize the adorable Gir above. Even if you have no idea what that is though, you should still be able appreciate how sweet it was for Dorothy’s boyfriend to build a replica of her favorite robot in order to propose in style.

Link

11 Seriously Amazing Customer Service Stories

Posted: 09 Jun 2012 12:40 AM PDT

Imagine joking around by Tweeting that you want Mortons to meet you with a steak when land at an airport -and actually having them do it. That’s exactly what happened to Peter Shankman:

It just happened to occur over dinnertime, and he knew he would be starving when he deplaned and headed home. "Hey, @Mortons – can you meet me at newark airport with a porterhouse when I land in two hours? K, thanks. :) " Imagine his surprise when he got off the plane to find a tuxedoed gentleman holding a bag that contained a 24 oz. Morton's porterhouse, shrimp, potatoes, bread, napkins and silverware. Shankman noted that the Tweet had to be noticed, someone had to get approval for the idea, a cook had to make his food, the food had to be driven 23.5 miles away from the nearest Morton's, and someone had to track down his flight information and figure out where he was landing to meet him at the right location.

Read about 10 other amazing customer service experiences over on Mental Floss.

More Bananas Please!!

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 11:39 PM PDT

(Video Link)

There should be a Guinness title for this sort of achievement. After all, I bet you couldn’t do any better…just try, I’ll wait.

Via I Can Has Cheezburger

Pass Me a Beer, Bro

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 08:00 PM PDT


(Video Link)

Handing a beer to a friend — it’s a simple bonding act between men. But for these guys, it’s also an opportunity to perform remarkable acrobatic feats.

Guys, if there’s a blooper reel, don’t tell me. I fear that the lives of many beers were brutally cut short during the production of this video.

-via That’s Nerdalicious!

Star Trek Engagement Ring

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 07:00 PM PDT

Have you ever been so in love that you felt like your warp core was going to breach? Then you need this custom Starfleet insignia ring by Etsy seller Valerie. It’s made of sterling silver and gold and contains a small white sapphire. Engage.

Link -via Walyou

The Word “Pony” is Uttered 381 Times in Season 1 of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 05:32 PM PDT


(Video Link)

It’s true. And thanks to YouTube user GameFreak2413, you can hear all of them in order for 2 minutes and 46 seconds.

At some point, there’s going to be a season 10 of the series. Just imagine that supercut video.

I found this video in a post at Nerd Bastards. It rounds up 25 excellent supercuts, including some for Star Wars, Doctor Who, Game of Thrones and Harry Potter. You can watch them at the link.

Link

Nanoflowers

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 05:00 PM PDT

They sure look beautiful, but they're not just any flower ... they're nanoflowers!

Nanoflowers may not impress your date, but researchers say these floral-shaped molecules—so tiny you'd need an electron microscope to see them—may have other uses. The objects (shown above) consist of a protein encased in copper phosphate "petals." As well as looking pretty, these petals perform two important functions. First, they stabilize the protein to prevent it from breaking down. Secondly, if the protein has catalytic properties—that is, if it speeds up other chemical reactions—encasing it in a nanoflower makes it a more effective catalyst. Nanoflower catalysts therefore work better and last longer than the bare proteins.

Link 

Darth Vader LEGO Star Wars Desk Lamp

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 04:52 PM PDT

Darth Vader LEGO Star Wars Desk Lamp – $59.95

Are you sensing that your desk is missing something? You need the Darth Vader LEGO Star Wars Desk Lamp from the NeatoShop. This fantastic lamp comes complete with a movable and bendable Darth Vader with bright 12 LED lightsaber lamp clutched in his hand. He can be used both on and off of his base. Perhaps this lamp can find new ways to motivate you to do your work.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more Star Wars and LEGO fun!

Link  

Self-Making Bed

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 04:30 PM PDT


(Video Link)

I’m tired of making the bed. Or would be, I suppose, if I did that on a regular basis. This bed by Spanish furniture maker OHEA eliminates any possible excuses. The first step, which is the hardest, is to get out of bed. Should you be so foolish as to do so, the bed will wait three seconds to verify that it is unoccupied. Then hooks grab the sheets and straighten them, placing them under the pillows which the bed lifts out of the way.

Link -via Make

Little Ear Earring

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 04:00 PM PDT

Percy Lau created this clever ear-shape earring called "Little Third Ear," which makes it look like your ear has grown a teeny tiny ear of its own!

Link (Don't miss the Nose Necklace!) - via Nerdcore

Robotic Chaplain Comforts the Dying

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 03:30 PM PDT


(Video Link)

Robots are increasingly active in human medical care, from stabbing us with knives, to rescuing us from scene of the stabbing, to handling triage, drawing blood and providing nursing care at the hospital

But before they turn us into consumable biomass, the robots will lovingly say goodbye to us. The Last Moment Robot, designed by Dan Chen, is a chaplain that gently strokes and says soothing words to a human on his deathbed. Because it cares.

Link -via Nerdcore

The Fall of Gaddafi and The Rise of the Desert Locust

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 03:00 PM PDT


Photo: Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations

The fall of the Gaddafi regime in Libya has an unforeseen consequence: the rise of the desert locusts.

Life's Little Mysteries explains:

"The fall of Gaddafi was an enormous factor, to be honest," said Keith Cressman, FAO senior locust forecasting officer, according to the Financial Times. "It depleted the Libyans' capacity to monitor and respond as they normally would."

Desert locust swarms formed in Libya and Algeria in mid-May after abundant rainfall facilitated growth of vegetation on which they feed. However, insecurity along the Libya-Algeria border — a consequence of the uprising — has prevented affected areas from being sprayed.

Gaddafi's regime tightly controlled the country's locust population, regularly sending convoys of survey and pest control vehicles into the desert areas where locusts breed, Cressman said. Libyan convoys even came to the aid of other African countries facing locust infestations. "But now they are the ones needing help," he said.

Link 

Snipers Hid in Fake Trees During World War I

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 02:30 PM PDT

Obviously the German soldiers might notice a tree where there had not been one before. That’s why the British Empire’s Royal Engineers built fake trees to resemble specific trees in no man’s land. During the night, they’d cut down the original and replace it with the fake:

To develop the O.P. Tree, Royal Engineers representatives selected, measured, and photographed the original tree, in situ, extensively. The ideal tree was dead; often it was bomb blasted. The photographs and sketches were brought back to the workshop, where artists constructed an artificial tree of hollow steel cylinders, but containing an internal scaffolding for reinforcement, to allow a sniper or observer to ascend within the structure. Then, under the cover of night, the team cut down the authentic tree and dug a hole in the place of its roots, in which they placed the O.P. Tree. When the sun rose over the field, what looked like a tree was a tree no longer; rather, it was an exquisitely crafted hunting blind, maximizing personal concealment and observational capacity simultaneously.

Link -via io9 | Photo: Australian War Memorial

Mark Zuckerberg’s Face Made With Books

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 02:00 PM PDT

Face ... book? Get it?

Artist Hong Yi (previously on Neatorama) has created the face of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg by slicing pages off books (The Games of Thrones, the thickest she could find).

Link - via Design Taxi

Lost Wormhole

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 01:30 PM PDT

Whatever you do, don't try to catch the lost wormhole, said Michael Kleinman. You've been warned!

Link - via Laughing Squid

The New York Times Morgue

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 01:00 PM PDT

Deep in the basement of the venerable The New York Times, there's a morgue of sorts. At least that's what Times employee call the newspaper's archive.

Jeff Roth, the sole custodian of the NY Times morgue explains:

By the numbers: It's 4,000 cabinet drawers of newspaper clips, according to Roth, and 5 to 6 million photographic prints and contact sheets, cross-referenced by card catalogs made on typewriters and amended by hand. The scope is downright unfathomable, the system impossibly antiquated.

Down here, there are no windows; there's no natural light. It's forever fluorescent, and time seems to stop as you crank open the rickety filing cabinets and sift through photo after never-ending photo of who knows what.

Claire O'Neill of NPR's The Picture Show has the story: Link

Previously on Neatorama: The Lively Morgue, a Tumblr blog featuring random photos from The New York Times archive.

 

Smuggled Pangolins Saved From Being Eaten

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 12:30 PM PDT


Photo: Sakchai Lalit

The rolled up animals above look like they belong in sci-fi movies, but they're actually quite real. And apparently, quite yummy.

Thai officials rescued 171 pangolins, described by some as "walking pine cone," in Thailand. The shy and defenseless animals are hunted for their meat and their scales which are used in Chinese medicine.

Phaedra Singelis of MSNBC's Photo Blog has the story and pics: Link

Sex Circuit of a Male Fruit Fly

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 12:00 PM PDT


Image: Vanessa Ruta

Hello, Drosophila ladies! The good news is that scientists at Washington University in St. Louis have discovered the secret of what makes male fruit flies go crazy for you.

The bad news is that it's a gene that trigger their sex circuit, a four-neuron circuit in the male fruit fly brain, that release the male courtship behavior. In fact, once the circuit is triggered, a male fruit fly will mate with just about anything, including a decapitated female:

Fruit fly courtship is so highly stylized and repetitive, it is as instantly recognizable as the knee jerk or Achilles reflex.

A male lines himself up behind a female and then chases her, licking her and tapping her with his forelegs while vibrating his wings to sing to her. If she responds to these blandishments, the male attempts to mount her. (To hear the song, click here.)

Scientists at Washington University in St. Louis have found a gene that seems to unleash the courtship ritual. Males missing this gene are capable of courtship; they just have trouble getting started.

This lackadaisical behavior is remarkable because males are usually “highly sexed,” to the point that they will court and mount “perfumed dummies,” decapitated females coated in waxy pheromones.

Link - Thanks Diana!

Previously on Neatorama: 30 Strangest Animal Mating Habits

X-Men Reimagined

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 11:30 AM PDT

Aaron Diaz of Dresden Codak comics (previously on Neatorama) reimagined some X-Men characters first as angst-ridden teenagers making their way in the world, then as young adults growing up. See if you can figure out who is who: Link - via Metafilter

If you like this, checkout Aaron's reboot of Batman, the Justice League and The Legion of Doom 

Why We Have Personal Space

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 11:00 AM PDT


Image: WebHamster/Wikimedia Commons

Feel icky when someone gets too close? Blame your brain! Turns out, the amygdala, the brain region that governs fear, is activated when someone "invades" your personal space:

According to [Caltech psychology and neuroscience professor Ralph Adolphs], we begin to develop our individual sense of personal space around age 3 or 4, and the sizes of our bubbles cement themselves by adolescence. In research published in the journal Nature in 2009, Adolphs and his colleagues determined that the bubbles are constructed and monitored by the amygdala, the brain region involved in fear.

"The amygdala is activated when you invade people's personal space," he told Life's Little Mysteries. "This probably reflects the strong emotional response when somebody gets too close to us. We confirmed this in a rare patient with lesions to this brain structure: she felt entirely comfortable no matter how close somebody got to her, and had no apparent personal space."

Futhermore, he said, abnormal development of the amygdala may also explain why people with autism have difficulties maintaining a normal social distance to other people.

Life's Little Mysteries has the post: Link 

Toothbrush Channels Water for Rinsing

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 10:15 AM PDT

Ostensibly, the Rinser toothbrush from Amron-Oral is designed to help you rinse your mouth. But it may also suddenly shoot water into your face when you’re too sleepy to think clearly. The Rinser comes with replacement heads so that you don’t have to buy a new handle when a set of bristles wears out. Watch a video of it at the link.

Link -via OhGizmo!

For Interior Designers With A Sense of Humor

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 09:00 AM PDT

Sit! Stay! Good boy…wait a minute. Don’t you just hate it when your new furniture starts pooping all over your living room? Well, at least you’re stylish, even if it means having to step in dog poop to turn your lamp on and off.

Link Via Laughing Squid

The Complete History of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 08:00 AM PDT

The first time I ever heard of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, I had to laugh, and  thought of course, a little boy thought that one up! You know, kind of like Axe Cop. Well, the story of the actual origin of TMNT is told in an article by Rob Lammle at mental floss, along with all the steps they went through to be comic book, TV, and movie stars. Link

The Transit of Venus Close Up!

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 07:00 AM PDT

Did you see the transit of Venus this week? Even if you did, you didn’t see it like the joint US-Japanese Hinode space mission did! But we can see the amazing picture it took. Link

Fascinating Illustrations By Anatoly Fomenko

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 06:36 AM PDT

Russian mathematician Anatoly Fomenko creates illustrations which are both expressions of mathematical concepts and visual  depictions of his innermost thoughts and emotions.

With razor sharp use of perspective, abstract imagery and many shades of gray, Anatoly’s works are at once amazing and confounding, and would look right at home on the cover of a Pink Floyd album.

You can take your eyes on a long, strange trip through Anatoly’s works at the Juxtapoz link below, and try not to get lost in there!

Link  –via Juxtapoz

Kitten vs. Bunny

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 06:00 AM PDT


(YouTube link)

The cutest wrestling match ever occurs when a kitten goes up against a bunny rabbit. I’d call the rabbit as the winner, but both seemed to enjoy the tussle. -via Daily Picks and Flicks

The 10 Weirdest Thefts Ever

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 05:54 AM PDT

Imagine looking out at your front yard one day and realizing your lawn is missing. That’s just what happened to Denise Thompson:

It was where her four children and two dogs played, and where she drank coffee on sunny mornings. Then someone stole it. They didn’t even leave a note. Thompson and her children went away to visit her husband one morning. They returned to their Kilkenny neighborhood home. The family entered through the back door and everything seemed fine. Then Thompson opened the blinds on the large picture window in the front room. Oh my God, she thought, where is my grass?
She went outside to the swath of ugly, brown dirt that had replaced her lawn. She thought there might be a note to explain an accident, like when someone dings your car in the mall parking lot. There were no clues. Thompson canvassed neighbors and several reported a white truck and trailer parked at her house. No one thought it was suspicious. Just another landscaping job.

And believe it or not, that’s not even the weirdest theft story on this list!

Link

Lessons from America’s Greatest Prankster

Posted: 08 Jun 2012 05:06 AM PDT

Hoax master Alan Abel has been fooling reporters and hoodwinking the public for more than 50 years. Here, he reveals a few of his tricks.

Most careers aren’t launched by the sight of a cow and a bull copulating in the middle of a road. But Alan Abel doesn’t have a typical gig. One day in 1957, the aspiring jazz drummer was driving to a show in Texas when he got caught in a rural traffic jam. The cause of the snarl: a cow and a bull engaging in some very public relations. Abel didn’t think twice about the bovine display, but the expression of moral outrage on other motorists’ faces fascinated him.

By the time Abel reached his destination, he’d decided to launch the Society for Indecency to Naked Animals. Under the war cry “A nude horse is a rude horse,” SINA strove to create a more moral society through clothing mammals. Two years later, with the help of actor Buck Henry (who posed as the group’s president), Abel bamboozled the media into thinking SINA was a real activist group. Even the networks were fooled -Walter Cronkite covered the story for CBS News.

SINA was just the first of Abel’s many stunts. For the past half century, the prankster has made a career out of giving Americans “a kick in the intellect.” And he’s done a lot of kicking. From 1975 to 1988, Abel posed as Omar, founder of Omar’s School for Beggars, a long-running hoax that brough attention to unemployment and homelessness. In 1979, Abel paraded an imposter “Idi Amin” around New York City and staged an elaborate green card wedding with a young WASP to spotlight the State Department’s coddling of the genocidal dictator. In 1985, during one of the first live tapings of The Phil Donohue Show, Abel stocked the audience with fainting women as a protest against bad television. And when David Duke ran for governor of Louisiana in 1991, Abel released music from the fictitious Ku Klux Klan Symphony, guest-conducted by Duke, to highlight the politician’s former Klan ties.

With such a creative mind, Abel might have made millions in advertising or television, but he’s never held a “real” job. For many years, Harry Scherman, the late founder of the Book of the Month Club, was Abel’s benefactor, underwriting projects such as the Idi Amin caper. What little Abel makes comes out of his prank’s budgets. You might say he lives hoax to hoax.


(YouTube link)

Financial uncertainty has never deterred him, though. Even at 81, Abel is still cooking up capers. However, these days he’s so easily recognized -especially after his daughter Jenny’s 2005 biodoc, Abel raises Cain- that he has to stay hidden in the background. Mental_floss asked Abel to share a few pointers with aspiring hoaxsters.

* Use Current Events

“When I saw Dr. Kevorkian’s [1990s] campaign to assist suicide, I realized their should be a cruise line for suicide. There’s a cruise line for everybody -for golfers, for the AARP- so why not a cruise for those who want to terminate?

The Last Supper sailed from Ft. Lauderdale once a week with 25 people. Three days of sex, fun, food, dancing, and singing. And then the schooner would tilt. The rail would be taken off one side, the deck was greased, [and] all 25 people would go down into Davy Jones’s Locker!”

* Play to the Press

“[The media] wants to believe. For example, the color code with Homeland Security doesn’t take into consideration those people who are color-blind. Two million are going to be unprotected. I brought that up as a campaign last year, and that got some attention.”

* Cast Real People

“Actors like to act. I’ve always liked to use non-actors. I found a guy on the subway that looked like Idi Amin, about 6-foot-6, weighed 275. He was unemployed, and for $500 he said, ‘Sure, I can look mean and not speak.’ I worked at Radio City Music Hall as a drummer and I had a lot of friends in the orchestra. The tuba player, one of the cellists -I had these guys posing as private guards, and it worked out fine.”


(YouTube link)

* Let the Media Come to You

“The day before the [Idi Amin wedding] ceremony, we went over to Tiffany’s with our entourage, and they gave him the royal treatment. People were crowding around the windows on Fifth Avenue, trying to figure out what was going on. the hotel was barraged with calls from the media. The rumors were spreading like wildfire. The next day we had over 105 reporters!”

* Water the Grassroots

“[For SINA] I had leaflets printed up explaining our philosophy that all animals must wear clothing. I probably had 10,000. I’d leave them everywhere. If I was going to a men’s room, I’d leave one in there. In the library, we’d put them in books… but only in serious books! Buck [Henry] and me and some of our followers went out to the San Francisco Zoo and declared it a moral disaster area.”

* Never Break Character

“It’s not easy. This gal from CBS came along to interview Zev, an actor friend of mine. We had dinner at Morton’s in New York. Zev was pretending that he was going on The Last Supper in a week [to] end his life. She got very emotional and started to cry. The place is filled with mostly media people -nobody’s talking; everyone’s listening. I couldn’t laugh or smile, or then it would all be over. She says, ‘Let me go along with Zev.’ I was Dr. Rogers. I said, ‘We only sell one-way tickets.’ I bit down so hard on my lip it was actually bleeding.”

_______________________

The article above, written by Kent Black, is reprinted with permission from the March-April 2012 issue of mental_floss magazine. Get a subscription to mental_floss and never miss an issue!

Be sure to visit mental_floss‘ website and blog for more fun stuff!

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