The subconscious art of graffiti removal

Urban Prankster points out the unintentional, subconscious art that results from the removal of graffiti: removal-500x375.jpg

I snapped the above photo in downtown Manhattan a month or so ago. There were several stone rectangles around the property that all looked similar. What a great example of the subconscious art of graffiti removal!

Personally, I’m always somewhat disappointed when people paint over graffiti (unless the graffiti is offensive, of course — although that, too, is in the eye of the beholder). This way of looking at it makes me feel slightly better about it, I suppose. It’s all about perspective. 


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The Futuro House: Home of the Future

WebUrbanist provides an interesting look at the space-age Futuro House, designed by Finnish architect Matti Suuronen in 1968:
Futuro_main1.jpg

Evoking images of flying saucers, interplanetary space pods and science fiction futurism, the Futuro house offered homeowners
a chance to live in the future without ever leaving their front yards.
Finnish architect Matti Suuronen designed the Futuro house in 1968 but
only 96 of the fiberglass-reinforced polyester plastic pods were
produced over a 5-year period – killed by the 1973 Oil Crisis that
tripled the price of plastics. Today, roughly half of the ellip
soid
structures have been accounted for and their iconic design
has made them a favorite of pop culture collectors, retrofuturism fans
and all those who appreciate the impact of 1960s Space Age style.

You can read the full article, and see more pictures, here.

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Modern abandoned cities

Ghost towns are no big deal, really. There’s plenty of them out west, and most states have at ghost city.jpgleast a handful of their own (my home state of Ohio has more than a dozen, including the interestingly-named

Ghost cities, though, are another matter. While most people, especially those living in the Rust Belt, are familiar with the ongoing decline of cities like Cleveland, Flint, Michigan, and dozens of other former steel towns and manufacturing centers, it’s difficult to imagine an entire city being abandoned and left to rot. 

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An illustrated guide to herbalism

Herbalism, the traditional medicinal practice which uses plants, fungi, and extracts to treatmandrake.jpg illnesses and injury, dates back at least 5,300 years (and is no doubt much older). During the Middle Ages and well into the Renaissance, herbalism was the cutting edge of medicine in Europe and elsewhere (even while the seeds of modern medicine were taking root in the Middle East). 

BibliOdyssey offers an interesting glimpse of an illustrative guide to herbs printed in Augsburg around 1520.The hand-written text is titled “Arzneipflanzenbuch” and 

 incorporate elements from folklore (the crossbow is from an age-old
legend, for instance), witchcraft and alchemy (the traditional
anthropomorphic Mandragora
* – mandrake – and zoomorphic root forms) and the often stylised appearance of the plants suggest the manuscript artist may have been copying from earlier works.


Pictured here is an example of the anthropomorphized mandrake. The mandrake, of the plant genus Mandragora, belongs to the nightshades family and, according to wikipedia, “contains deliriant hallucinogenic tropane alkaloids such as hyoscyamine.” Mandrake roots, of course, have “long been used in magic rituals, today also in neopagan religions such as Wicca and Germanic revivalism religions such as Odinism.”

Today, herbalism flourishes, even in the face of modern medical science and pharmaceuticals. In fact, in some instances, it is so well-marketed as to be mainstream. Few of us think twice about using aloe vera, an herbal extract, to treat sunburns, and even fewer remember that the active compound in aspirin was originally derived from the bark of willow trees. 
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Apparently there exists a “simulated death” industry.

… And it’s thriving in South Korea, of all places. The LA Times reports that

Across South Korea, entrepreneurs are holding controversial forums aimed at teaching clients how to better appreciate life by simulating death. They use mortality as a personal motivator. 

[At] the Coffin Academy, South Koreans can get a glimpse into the abyss. Over four hours, groups of a dozen or more tearfully write their letters of goodbye and tombstone epitaphs. Finally, they attend their own funerals and try the coffin on for size.


Interesting stuff. The article, which you can read in its entirety here, goes on to note that this is partially in response to the fact that South Korea has the highest suicide rate in the developed world. 

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What is The Bloop?

The Bloop,” according to the ever-dependable Wikipedia, is an “ultra-low frequency and Bloop.jpgextremely powerful underwater sound detected by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration several times during the summer of 1997.” The sound’s source, mysteriously, still remains unknown. 

The Bloop was detected by equipment designed to monitor Russian submarines – and was recorded by multiple listening devices as far as 5,000 km apart. Scientists have noted that while The Bloop’s audio profile does “resemble that of a living creature,” it is several times louder than the loudest known biological sound (which, incidentally, is made by the blue whale – the largest known aquatic animal). 

So what produced The Bloop? An impossibly large whale? Otherwise-undetected geological activity on the ocean floor? A secret Russian weapon? Speculation abounds, and some, turning to the work of author H.P. Lovecraft, have offered a more controversial explanation: Cthulhu. BloopWatch.org points out the similarities to the famous creature of the Lovecraft mythos: 

The sound is believed to be coming roughly from 50oS; 100oW. After
reading that, I wondered how close that was to the coordinates given in
“The Call of Cthulhu”. Allow me to quote: “Then, driven ahead by
curiosity in their captured yacht under Johansen’s command, the men
sight a great stone pillar sticking out of the sea, and in S. Latitude
47°9′, W. Longitude l23°43′, come upon a coastline of mingled mud,
ooze, and weedy Cyclopean masonry which can be nothing less than the
tangible substance of earth’s supreme terror – the nightmare
corpse-city of R’lyeh, that was built in measureless aeons behind
history by the vast, loathsome shapes that seeped down from the dark
stars.”
 Gotta love it!

Whatever made it, you can listen to The Bloop yourself here. Personally, this whole thing gives me chills. The uncharted depths of the ocean are a scary, mysterious place. 

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Welcome to the new year! Now how do we say it?

The nefarious Noughties are over as of 12:01 this morning – a welcome end to what most Americans consider the worst decade in 50 years, according to a recent Pew Research Poll

The debate is now on, of course, as to how to pronounce the year we’re living in. Some experts suggest that we used the “two-thousand-and” formulation to pronounce the years 2000-2009 mainly due to the influence of the 1968 film “2001: A Space Odyssey” (which also used the “two-thousand-and” formulation). This issue was discussed briefly on NPR two months ago: 

SIEGEL: And then what? What do we call the year that kicks in when the
ball comes down? The four digits, 2-0-1-0, are not in dispute, but how
we say them evidently is. Is it two-thousand ten or twenty-ten? We’ve
checked our own airwaves, and we find them to be, as you might expect, impeccably balanced.


[…]

Mr.LASSER: I think when you put the year, when it’s describing
something, like the nineteen-eighty-five Bears, the fiercest team ever,
if you’re when the year is describing a noun, I think you can go into
the truncated version. So if you said the twenty-ten Nike super shoe,
like that’s fine, but when you talk about the year on itself, like a
noun, like a proper noun, like a person, like a citizen, it would be
two-thousand and ten.

SIEGEL: As in the great twenty-ten controversy. What shall we call the year two-thousand ten? 


Personally, “twenty-ten” still doesn’t sound right. I think it’ll be “two-thousand-” for me until at least 2013 or so. I’m gonna propose right now, though, that we call this decade the “two-thousand-teens” (say it fast). Not too original, but it has a nice ring to it.

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Unusual, neglected, and/or lost literature

Are you, like me, tired of the New York Times Best-seller lists? Are you at a loss for reading material, and perhaps looking for books that are less mainstream, maybe off the beaten path? Stephen K. Baum, PhD, of Texas A&M University, has compiled an expansive, annotated list of interesting lesser-known literature. The list itself spans more than 300 pages, and includes a helpful sub-list of other lists of lesser-known books, too (my favorite of these are the 50 Essential Alternative Horror Books, the Guide to 20th Century Experimental Literature, and The Invisible Library – a list of fictional books that appear within other books). 

Baum’s list, in his words, is composed of books from the “general category of unusual literature, for which the best definition I can come up with
at the moment is: stuff I like that’s a little or a lot different than most of the stuff you’ll
find down at the local Books’R’Us”. 
At any rate, if you’re searching for something to read, check out the list here – it alone will take you a few days to get through. 
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Scientists find hints of dark matter at the bottom of a mine

Scientists searching for evidence of the existence of dark matter, the hypothetical matter theorized to account for the majority of the observable universe’s mass, have found vague but intriguing clues at the bottom of a Minnesotan mine:

An international team of physicists working in the bottom of an old
iron mine in Minnesota said Thursday that they might have registered
the first faint hints of a ghostly sea of subatomic particles known as dark matter long thought to permeate the cosmos.

The particles showed as two
tiny pulses of heat deposited over the course of two years in chunks of
germanium and silicon that had been cooled to a temperature near
absolute zero. But, the scientists said, there was more than a 20
percent chance that the pulses were caused by fluctuations in the
background radioactivity of their cavern, so the results were
tantalizing, but not definitive.

You can read the rest of the article here.

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Ancient whale ate mud

Well, not exactly. Mammalodon, who vaguely resembles a manatee and lived at least 25 million years ago, 

fed by sucking small animals out of the seafloor mud with its short snout and tongue, 

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experts say.

Researchers say the 25 million-year-old fossil is related to today’s blue whales – the largest animals on Earth.

The ancient animal’s mud slurping may have been a precursor to the filter feeding seen in modern baleen whales.

These whales strain huge quantities of tiny marine animals through specialised “combs” which take the place of teeth.

The research is published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 


You can read the full article here.

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Man’s friends gift wrap his possessions in Christmas prank

Merry Christmas to all! The Courier-Post Online reports that

A Chicago man could be unwrapping the hundreds of Christmas gifts spread around his apartment for days, even weeks.Trouble
is, they aren’t really presents. They’re his own belongings
meticulously wrapped by friends as a prank while he was out of town.
Louie Saunders’ packages contain everything from couch cushions to the beer in his refrigerator
.

His friend Adal Rifai masterminded the scheme after Saunders gave him a
spare key. It took 16 people, 35 rolls of wrapping paper and eight
hours to finish the job.
Saunders tells the Chicago Sun-Times he’s only been able to unwrap about 10 percent of the packages.

He jokes that the upside is that, with each package he unwraps, he finds something inside that’s just what he needs.

Talk about spreading holiday cheer! You can read the original article here

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