Airline Offers Snails and Garlic Ice Cream to Paris-Bound Passengers

Would you eat escargot-flavored ice cream? It might be a good way to prepare for your stay in Paris.

The New York Post reports that EasyJet, a British discount airline, is offering snacks befitting the destinations of its travelers. Those traveling to Paris are served ice cream flavored with garlic and crystallized sugar made to resemble the texture of snail shells.

Travelers to Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Morocco also receive special "jet-lato" flavors. I would enjoy trying the ice cream made to taste like cacio e pepe, a cheese and pasta dish from Italy.

You can see a promotional video for the program on Instagram.

-via Dave Barry


Pickle Fountains Are the Ultimate Party Food Presentation

It's time to class up this shindig. Yes, a champagne fountain is nice, but it's also expensive and does not defeat the ennui of the modern party scene. But a pickle fountain will make sure that people talk about your party for years to come.

Born in Space has a roundup of TikTok videos showing people setting up and enjoying pickle fountains at events. The spigots are helpful for those of us who prefer to drink  pickle juice straight from the source. If you insist on staying traditional, you can offer champagne glasses to your guests for this purpose. But don't be surprised if I just stick my whole head under a spigot and open it up.

-via Dave Barry


For the First Time, Humans Have Viewed Antarctica from Space

Chung Yang, a billionaire investor and, now, astronaut is leading a current a SpaceX private orbital mission. The Times reports that Chun and three companions have a polar orbit, passing both the north and south poles every 46 minutes in their Dragon capsule. They found Antarctica transcendentally beautiful.

The four-person crew is also conducting 22 scientific experiments focused on how the human body reacts to space travel. These experiments include the first-ever X-ray performed on a human in space.

-via Massimo


The Earth, If It Were Rotated 90°

In their What If? video series (previously at Neatorama), Randall Munroe of XKCD and Henry Reich of MinutePhysics look into wild theoretical questions from fans, no matter how stupid they are. Now, we know that the earth rotates 360° every day. But this question is about rotating it in a different direction, sideways to be exact, changing its orientation completely. To see what would happen, they theoretically made the Greenwich Meridian into the equator. That changes everything, especially the way we see the globe. London is suddenly in the tropics, and India is where Siberia used to be. Antarctica would be a much smaller island without its ice cap. Some places, like where I live, wouldn't change its climate or weather too much, we'd just be in a different hemisphere. If this change were to happen gradually, the earth would adapt, but it it were sudden, it could be a mass extinction event.


Can You Identify This Ghibli Film by Its Color Palette?

Which of Hayao Miyazaki's films is depicted above? Yes, it's Spirited Away!

The palette of a film's most dominant colors can help us recognize it, sometimes instantly. NYC-based illustrator and graphic designer Hyo Taek Kim has, in the past, attracted our attention for his color palettes of Star Wars and Disney films.

Kim has also created a poster depicting Studio Ghibli fims, including My Neighbor Totoro, Howl's Moving Castle, Princess Mononoke, The Wind Rises, Porco Rosso, Ponyo, Nausicaä, Castle in the Sky, and Kiki's Delivery Service.

-via Spoon & Tamago


Dr. Buckland’s Scotch Oats Essence Was Not What It Seemed

With all the medicines, remedies, and supplements available to cure what ails ya, the name Dr. Buckland’s Scotch Oats Essence stands out as being particularly benign and natural. What could be more wholesome for your body than oats? And Scotch oats, to be exact! This patent medicine, introduced in 1886, promised to relieve the pain of "sciatica, headaches, neurasthenia, hysteria, ovarian neuralgia, epilepsy" and even alcoholism and drug addiction. That's a pretty broad range for any medicine. It was quite popular for a short time.

But in 1888, a pharmaceutical magazine published an analysis of Dr. Buckland’s Scotch Oats Essence that revealed its active ingredients were alcohol and morphine. Alcoholics and drug addicts who took it appeared to get better, because they didn't have to seek out other sources of drugs! Further research revealed that there was no such person as Dr. Buckland. Read the story of Dr. Buckland’s Scotch Oats Essence and the medical practitioner who was really behind it at The Quack Doctor. -via Strange Company

(Image source: Boston Public Library)


Psychologists Wonder Why Men Like Looking at Breasts

It is a truth universally acknowledged that men, as a broad generalization, enjoy gazing upon the bosoms of fair maidens. Why is this so? One popular belief is that some cultures sexualize human breasts and thus impose lasvicious desire upon the breasts, whereas other cultures regard breasts as no more inherently sexual than any other part of the body.

Is this belief true? Michal Mikolaj Stefanczyk, an evolutionary psychologist at the University of Wrocław, and his colleagues recently published an article in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior on the subject.

The scholars examined a tribe in Papua New Guinea for which female toplessness was the norm until recently. The found that men who grew up in times when most women were topless were as fascinated with breasts as men who grew up after toplessness became uncommon.

This evidence suggests that a male interest in breasts is innate and, The Times summarizes, not culturally driven. Yet it is also clear that further research of breasts is necessary and appropriate as a scientific endeavor.

-via Dave Barry | Image by Jimmy Johnson


The Winners of the Smithsonian's Annual Photography Competition

The Grand Prize winner in the 22nd annual Smithsonian Photography Contest shows us a scene from a horror film, in which a giant praying mantis has won a battle against another of its species, having bitten its head off. But this photo hasn't been manipulated; photographer Takuya Ishiguro got down on the ground to shoot pictures of the macabre scene between two normal-sized insects. The closeup shot shows the praying mantises in detail, while the pavement takes on an otherworldly texture. The truck and the signs in the background help to bend the reality of scale.

Click to the right on the Instagram post above to see more winners from the competition in different categories such as People, Travel, the Natural World, and the Reader's Choice Award. Read about the contest and the stories behind the images at Smithsonian. There were more than 30,000 entries, and you can see the 60 finalists here. 


Seven Killers Who Appeared on TV Before They Were Caught



The explosion of channels that came with cable TV more than 40 years ago meant that suddenly there were hundreds and hundreds of people on TV every day, working to fill those channels with 24/7 content. It only stands to reason that some of those folks would end up being arrested for murder, even multiple murders. In some cases, it was only after they were arrested that their TV appearances were discovered in the archives and took on a whole new aura. No, you didn't know there was something suspicious about that fellow when you saw him on a game show- you just think that now that we know the truth. The implication is that any one of those people you see on TV on any given day could be harboring secrets that would give you the willies. Weird History tells us the stories of seven killers who had previously been on TV, mostly for something completely different.


The Newest Letter in Our Alphabet

The 26 letters of the Latin alphabet have been around a long time and aren't liable to change anytime soon. The last letter was added to it around 400 years ago, but it's not Z, even though that is the "last letter." Take a guess at which letter it is before you continue with the next paragraph.

The newest of the 26 letters is J, which descended from the letter I. See, in Latin, I was used as both a vowel and a consonant. That consonant in Latin had the Y sound. But as English developed, the I started to be used for words pronounced like a J. At least we think so- we don't have sound recordings, but we can't imagine pronouncing Shakespeare's play as Romeo and Yooliet back in 1597 when it was spelled Romeo and Iuliet. The same with Iesus and Ioseph from the 1611 edition of the King James Bible. To make things easier, they introduced the J, which took quite a few years at the beginning of the 17th century to become standard. Read about the introduction of the J at Word Smarts. -Thanks, WTM!


The Mysteries of America's Geographical Panhandles

Laurence Brown of Lost in the Pond takes a look at the US map and addresses the quirks of state boundaries, namely those dangling rectangles that we call panhandles. These are even stranger than the squiggly lines of those borders, because they don't have much of anything to do with natural geography like mountains or rivers. Every one of these panhandles has a story behind it, or what he calls a "ridiculously complex history." Some have to do with the military conquests between England, Spain, and France for American territory as the US was formed. Others are due to political machinations during the time the borders were drawn, because there have always been competition between states, for one reason or another. Or between countries, in the case of Alaska's panhandle. Some of these disputes are still going on the in the 21st century! There's a 45-second skippable ad at 2:47.


Winston Churchill and the British Witch Trial of ...1944?

Great Britain prosecuted many women for witchcraft under the Witchcraft Act of 1735. That act was actually a reformed version of earlier laws, making a claim of magical powers punishable by prison instead of death. Still, you'd think that witchcraft trials would have died out long ago, but Helen Duncan was charged under the act in 1944! Duncan was a well-known Scottish medium who held seances and claimed to communicate with the dead. During these seances, she produced "ectoplasm" from her nose and mouth. In the image above you can see that the "ectoplasm" looks a lot like cheesecloth and the apparition appears to be a papier-mâché puppet.

It was in 1941 that Duncan really got into trouble, when she "saw" the sinking of a British warship before officials knew about it. Was Duncan a charlatan, a spy, or just a security risk? British officials weren't taking any chances, and charged her under the Vagrancy Act, which covered fraud. But under that law, she might have very well escaped any prison time, so prosecutors pulled out the Witchcraft Act as well in order to ensure Duncan could be jailed for the remainder of the war. Prime Minister Winston Churchill was furious at the charge of witchcraft, and demanded to know how much much would be spent on this "obsolete tomfoolery." Read about Helen Duncan and her World War II witch trial at the Daily Mail. -via Strange Company


The Real King That Inspired Macbeth

Many people don't realize that William Shakespeare's play The Tragedy of Macbeth was inspired by a real king named Macbeth, or formally Macbethad mac Findláech. He was a Scottish king from 1040 until 1057. Anyone unfamiliar with the real Macbeth can be forgiven, since that was 1000 years ago and there have been a lot of kings in a lot of countries since then. Shakespeare obviously fictionalized the story, adding the prophesies of three witches that eventually came true. They aren't the only witches in the play, and there are also ghosts and prophetic visions. But Shakespeare added more than the supernatural elements to craft his story- like lots and lots of murder. Five hundred years after the fact, the bard made a really tragic and compelling story out of the few facts we know about Macbeth's reign and the details that were added much later. In this TED-Ed lesson, Benjamin Hudson explains the many reasons Shakespeare had for crafting the tale of Macbeth the way he did.


The Adventures of Ivan the Terra Bus

Ross Island in Antarctica has a bus that transports people between the airport, McMurdo Station, and New Zealand’s Scott Base. But this is no ordinary bus. This transport vehicle is 46 feet long, and 12.5 feet wide, and it can hold 56 passengers. Its name is Ivan the Terra Bus. Ivan's tires are nearly six feet in diameter, and passengers must climb a ladder to get in. The bus was slow, but could drive through weather and terrain that other transport options couldn't. And Ivan served Ross Island faithfully for 30 years.

The very day the bus first arrived in 1994, a driver backed into a bollard, leaving a dent in the rear which has never been repaired. It's part of the bus's historic charm. The inside is covered in stickers, commemorating its riders' various adventures in Antarctica. But after 30 years, replacement parts were getting hard to obtain, and the bus was officially retired. However, Ivan the Terra Bus's fans hated to think that the bus would go to the scrap heap, and they rallied to make sure it would be preserved for posterity. Read up on the legacy of Ivan the Terra Bus, including the story behind its name, at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: Eli Duke)


Embroidered Composition Notebooks by Candace Hicks

Candace Hicks works primarily with fabric arts, notably embroidery on canvas. Her use of this long-established medium is highly innovative as we see in her faux composition notebooks.

They're not static images. You (or, better, a museum curator) can open them to reveal personal journals in fabric form.

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