The rain forest was one of the coolest parts. Replace it with "hooray for the U.S.A.?" Yechh!. Load up the ride with Disney characters "where they belong!?" Why don't they throw in a McDonald's in each country while they're at it? Oh for the days when the tackiest part of the ride was the departing message: Where ever you go Around the world You're never far From Bank of America!
I drew a cartoon about dolphin hooliganism awhile back: <img src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_okbACopjNRE/RhAhWph5OFI/AAAAAAAAANY/Mk_uGyLbGsE/s400/meandolphins.jpg" Not that I endorse it...
I googled some pictures of the death mask- and my vote is that it was made on someone who was alive. It seems too lifelike- as if she's trying to hold still and suppress a smile. Of course, this could be my imagination. Either way it's a fascinating story.
I guessed the song too. In a phonetics class I took in college: The professor recorded herself saying something like "Mal atTILLa da HE rem", then played it backwards and it became "Marry had a little lamb." We also had to learn how to transcribe and say our names backward, so when it recording reversed it sounded like our names.
I used to work in a tropical fish shop. From what I've seen, bettas can survive in small containers (you should see the tiny bags they're shipped in), but they live longer if they have a roomier tank. The Ipond is too small. People who want fish novelty items should stick to Big Mouth Billy Bass.
I thought it was cool, but wanted more explanation as to what was going on. Who put the holes there? Why were people compelled to go in them? For example, what if they turned out to be aliens or changelings who were instinctively drawn to the holes so they could pupate into their true forms?
I bet some of the witnesses they interviewed had more reasonable explanations (like,as many have observed here, it was something on the lens). That footage was probably cut from the piece because it'd ruin their ghost story. Makes you wonder what else is getting cut from the news.
Oh for the days when the tackiest part of the ride was the departing message:
Where ever you go
Around the world
You're never far
From Bank of America!
<img src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_okbACopjNRE/RhAhWph5OFI/AAAAAAAAANY/Mk_uGyLbGsE/s400/meandolphins.jpg"
Not that I endorse it...
Either way it's a fascinating story.
In a phonetics class I took in college:
The professor recorded herself saying something like
"Mal atTILLa da HE rem", then played it backwards and it became "Marry had a little lamb."
We also had to learn how to transcribe and say our names backward, so when it recording reversed it sounded like our names.