That Time a 10-Year-Old Spent a Week at the Movie Theater

In February of 1947, a story about a runaway child in San Francisco was picked up and made new nationwide. The boy was already home again, so there was no panic, and the story provoked mostly laughter. Richard Allen loved movies, and with $20 in his pocket, spent an entire week watching movies all day, buying comic books, and eating candy and hot dogs. He slept outside at night, and eventually was hauled back home by his father. The story was a sensation again when it went viral on the internet in 2021. But behind the headlines, there were questions. How did a 10-year-old boy in 1947 get his hands on $20? Why was he afraid to go home? And why weren't the police involved?

Allen died in 2020, so Joshua Bote of the San Francisco Gazetteer talked to his daughter Denise about her father's unique life, both before and after the theater incident. His mother dressed him up as Shirley Temple when he was a baby, he had a crush on Annette Funicello, he was a wrestling promoter in the 1980s, and he was once awarded Citizen of the Year. But he never told his daughter about the week he spent watching movies away from his parents. Yet Denise was able to fill in some of the blanks in the story, which you can read at the Gazetteer. -via Nag on the Lake


The 100th Anniversary of the "Crime of the Century"

On May 21, 1924, 18-year-old Richard Loeb lured a 14-year-old acquaintance, Bobby Franks, into his vehicle. They then picked up Loeb's friend, 19-year-old Nathan Leopold. The two men bashed in Franks' head with a chisel, stuffed a rag down his throat, removed his clothing, poured acid on him, and stashed his body ten miles from home in a culvert. Then they set about making a ransom demand from the boy's family. The ransom was never paid, as Franks' body was found the next day.

Leopold and Loeb held no animus toward Franks; he was just a convenient victim for their experiment in committing the perfect crime. It was far from perfect, though, and the two were soon arrested. The ghastly crime made national news, mostly because Leopold and Loeb were from wealthy and prominent Chicago families, and were considered to have bright futures. They also showed no remorse for the murder, and had only the thinnest of motives. There would not be a "trial of the century," because both pled guilty to the crime. Instead, there was a hearing before a judge on whether they should receive the death penalty or life imprisonment. And the renowned attorney Clarence Darrow was arguing for leniency. Interestingly, Bobby Franks himself had argued against the death penalty in a debate competition shortly before his murder. Read about the sensational case of Leopold and Loeb at Smithsonian.


This May Be the Iceberg That Sunk the Titanic

The RMS Titanic hit an iceberg and sank on the night of April 14, 1912. The nearest ship, the Carpathian, arrived in time to rescue 706 people, which left 1522 dead, either floating among the wreckage or at the bottom of the ocean still aboard the ship. The CS Mackay-Bennett was the first of several recovery ships sent to the spot, arriving two days after the disaster. Funeral director John R. Snow, Jr. was aboard, and is believed to have taken this photograph of an iceberg during the recovery operation. Is it the iceberg that sunk the Titanic? There's no way to know for sure, but it is the only photographic evidence we have of an iceberg in that area. The photograph went up for auction in April, expected to draw between $5,000 and $8,500. It sold for $32,000.

But even more interesting is the recovery mission itself. The Mackay-Bennett was dispatched with 100 coffins and 100 tons of ice to bring back the remains of those who did not survive the sinking. That ship recovered 306 bodies, more than any of the recovery ships that followed. Bodies were handled differently depending on the status of the person, with first-class passengers being embalmed and steerage passengers getting a burial at sea. Read about the photograph and the mission of the Mackay-Bennett at Artnet. -via Strange Company

(Image source: Henry Aldridge and Son Ltd.)  


Cats and Robots: Science, Art, or Entertainment?

A project called Cat Royale explores the possibilities of enriching cats' lives by having a robot play with them. It is a collaboration between the art collective Blast Theory and scientists from the University of Nottingham. The original experiment was conducted in Australia last year and is now a traveling exhibit. Three cats, Ghostbuster, Clover, and Pumpkin, spent six hours a day for twelve days in a "cat utopia" built for the experiment that provided beds, food and water, climbing spots, litter boxes, toys, a Kino Gen3 lite robot arm trained on cat videos, and human supervision.

So what happened? Overall, the cats had a blast, but there was a time or two that they outsmarted the robot arm and the researchers had to intervene. The research themes of the project, such as the interaction of artificial intelligence with everyday caregiving tasks, are explored thoroughly in a scientific paper published this month. The shorter, more understandable version of the experiment and its purpose is laid out at Ars Technica. But the real fun comes in as you can watch highlights from the experiment yourself with an entire series of YouTube videos.

(Image credit: Blast Theory/Stephen Daly)


Scratch and Sniff Baguette Postage Stamp Smells Like a Baguette

France continues to march forward in grandeur nationale, bearing the baguette as its symbol of collective pride. Last Thursday marked a special occasion for that leavened nationalism. It was the feast day of Saint Honoré, the patron saint of bakers. To celebrate, the national postal service released a scratch and sniff stamp that smells like a baguette.

France 24 reports that the stamp has a value of 1.96 Euros. The baguette is embraced with a ribbon showing the red, white, and blue colors of Revolutionary France--the proper order. The postal service is selling a total of 594,000 such stamps.

-via Marilyn Terrell | Image: Le Parisien


The Life of a Swedish Writer

Fredrik Backman is an acclaimed bestselling author. He is also the very embodiment of Swedish humor. He was asked to speak at Simon & Schuster's 100th anniversary celebration on the subject of his work life. In a very dry, calm, and understated fashion, he carefully describes the inner workings of a Scandinavian author. There's a lot going on underneath that placid exterior, and it's not all good. His agent gets subliminally roasted for getting him into this predicament, and at one point he has to stop the audience from laughing because it's cutting into his time. Backman is ostensibly trying to encourage other people to begin writing, but to most people it might come across as a horror show. Still, the audience is full of people who are born to write, whether they ever achieve success or not, so they can relate to and even appreciate his revelations.  -via Digg


The Buried Treasure of Gangster Dutch Schultz

Dutch Schultz was a notorious gangster who rose to prominence and made a fortune in bootlegging during Prohibition, then afterward continued to enrich himself with racketeering, loan sharking, and other crimes. Some estimates had him making $20 million a year from his various schemes. He is said to have killed 136 men who crossed him. But on October 23, 1935, Schultz was shot by other gangsters because the crime bosses of New Jersey had decided he was a liability. He did not die immediately, but was taken to a hospital, where police recorded his incoherent speech for a full 24 hours before he died. Most of what he said made no sense, but some took those words to heart.

The reason was because, according to Schultz's lawyer, he had stuffed cash, bonds, and diamonds into a lockbox and had buried it somewhere in the Catskill Mountains. In 1972, a treasure hunter revealed that story, and said that Schultz's dying statements were about the location of the treasure. There was also said to be a map somewhere that had been lost. In the 50 years since, treasure hunters have torn up the area where Schultz and a confederate supposdly buried the treasure. Read what we know about the lost treasure of Dutch Schultz at Mental Floss.


The Graduation Ritual of the Medieval Space Bonnet

In the Harry Potter stories, the Hogwarts Sorting Hat was used in a ritual to assign each new student to the house they would belong to. The inspiration for this ceremony might have been a graduation ritual at the University of Edinburgh, in which each student is tapped with the Geneva Bonnet, also sometimes called "the medieval space bonnet." The tradition goes back 150 years, but the cap is supposedly much older, having been made from the trousers of Reformation leader John Knox. He died in 1572, 13 years before the university was founded.   

But there is doubt about the bonnet's history. A restoration project in the early 2000s revealed a tailor's tag inside dated 1849. This could have been added during an earlier restoration, or it could mean that the cap was made up of whole cloth -pun intended. However, it's still quite old, and still used for every University of Edinburgh graduation ceremony. Read about the ritual of the Geneva bonnet, and how it came to called the medieval space bonnet at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: This is Edinburgh via Wikimedia Commons)


Extreme Mountain Biking Near Inverness



Trials cyclist Danny MacAskill (previously at Neatorama) has given us thrills for years with his bike antics. In this video, he reveals how he got so good at what he does by going out on a ride with his crazy friends in Scotland as they take on the Mast near Inverness. They aren't just following the death-defying trails; they also set up their own challenges along the way. The outing is funny, thrilling, ridiculous, and vertigo-inducing in places. In other words, you'll enjoy watching it and will be thankful it isn't you negotiating those challenges. These guys can admit being scared of a particular stunt, but then they go ahead and do it anyway. Adrenaline is addictive, after all. Bonus: no one had to be carried out and and sent to a hospital. Despite the American custom of adding captions to the dialogue, their Scottish-accented English is quite understandable. -via Kottke


The Jessie Scouts: Civil War Special Forces

Major General John Charles Frémont led US troops in California and had forged an army of crack troops who were experienced in war (the Mexican-American War), exploration, fighting Indians, hunting buffalo, and settlements in the West. The Civil War called him back to Missouri, where he commanded the Department of the West. In 1862, Frémont was assigned to the mountainous area of Virginia and what would later be West Virginia. He formed a unit consisting of a few dozen of his best fighters who called themselves Jessie Scouts, after Frémont's wife, who was considered to be smarter than her husband.

The Jessie Scouts used spy tactics to infiltrate Confederate units, which meant wearing Confederate uniforms, concocting false identities, perfecting a certain speaking style, and in at least one case, passing as a woman. They memorized code to recognize and communicate with each other while embedded with Confederates. Being found by Union soldiers could get them arrested, and being exposed to the Confederates would get them killed. Read the dangerous but crucial exploits of the Jessie Scouts at CrimeReads. -via Damn Interesting


The Stories Behind America's Odd Town Names

There are certain towns that always show up on lists of odd town names, often because they sound dirty, or because they've capitalized on the name to cultivate notoriety and draw tourists. Here's a list that goes beyond the beaten path to explain the origins of one strangely-named town in each of the 50 United States. It includes towns that have fairly obvious origins, like Volcano, Hawaii, and towns that should have a great story but were honestly named after a person, like Dickshooter in Idaho. It was named after Dick Shooter. Some were named in frustration with the US Postal Service when another name was rejected, like both Why, Arizona, and Whynot, North Carolina -although their stories are different.    

Other town names have great tales behind them, like Two Egg, Corner Ketch, Bacon Level, and Bugtussle, although we don't know if they are even remotely true. Neversink, New York has a wild story, even though it doesn't explain where the name originally came from. Check out odd town names in all 50 states at Mental Floss. The list is also available in video form, if you prefer.

(Image credit: Ken Lund)


Graduation Season in the South

Like football, high school graduation is a big deal in the South. The schools are enormous, the moms are crying, and the dads are bored out of their minds. Matt Mitchell lays it all out for us, including the once in a lifetime (for each kid) dinner at Red Lobster. Mitchell recorded this video on Monday, a fact he pinned in the comments, because Red Lobster outlets across the country closed suddenly on Wednesday. He says, "Life comes at you fast, but Chapter 11 bankruptcy comes faster."  

Although the video is about high school graduation, it hits home for me. I went to one of Auburn's graduation ceremonies last week (with 30,000 students, they have about a dozen commencements). I wore a suit, proper for spring in Kentucky, not realizing that Alabama is already at 90° in early May. All the other moms were in dresses and sandals. We went to Red Lobster, and had the whole place to ourselves. My kid had wanted to eat there for years, and got in just days before it closed.


55-Year Old Grandmother Is the First Person to Complete Brutal San Francisco Bay Swim

The waters between the Farallon Islands and the San Francisco mainland are extremely dangerous. They're cold, often populated by sharks, and are prone to brutal currents. Only six people have successfully swam the 30 mile stretch between them. Only one, the San Francisco Gate reports, have done so while starting from the mainland itself. That person is Amy Appelhans Gubser.

The 55-year old nurse and grandmother is already a noted world-class competitor in marathon swimming. She's planned this swim for five years. Gubser started her swim early in the morning last Saturday and arrived at the Farallon Islands seventeen hours later.

-via Conor Friedersdorf | Photo: Amy Appelhans Gubser


The Ugliest Muppet Toys in Existence

On the left is the Muppet named Pepe the King Prawn. He's not supposed to be pretty; he is supposed to be a shrimp. But the abomination on the right is supposed to look like Pepe, and it does not. Would you buy this plush toy for your five-year-old Muppet fan? The astonishing part is that this toy did not win the competition for the ugliest Muppet toy- it came in fifth. I did not want to traumatize you with those who scored higher, so you'll have to see for yourself.

Tough Pigs, a site dedicated to Muppet fandom, unveils the results of the Ugly Muppet Toy Pageant 2024. The 26 contestants are revealed from the least objectionable to the ugliest and least recognizable Muppet toys submitted by fans and voted for by readers. Each has "color commentary" from voters who try to guess how each toy went so wrong. You still have to wonder if there was any quality control in the designs at all, especially with those that are officially licensed Muppet merchandise (although you can bet that not all of them are).  

They've been doing these ugly Muppet toy pageants for years; check the previous collections out if you are so inclined. -via Metafilter


Pigeons Get a True Facts Video

Ze Frank manages to keep focused on nothing but scientific facts about pigeons for the first two minutes of this video, which are about how pigeons keep their vision steady, with information on how we do it ourselves. After that, it gets into their mating rituals, and it's not quite as wholesome as his surprising last video about bees posted here, but it's also not nearly as juvenile as his earlier episodes of True Facts. He goes on about how surprisingly smart pigeons are, considering their tiny bird brains. Those little brains are more densely packed with neurons than human brains! A pigeon's behavior is not all that sophisticated to us, but within their world, they have super powers that take advantage of opportunities that ensure their survival. At least the pigeons we have today outlasted the passenger pigeon, which went extinct in 1914. This video has a one-minute skippable ad at 3:48.






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