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Showing posts from October, 2018
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Image provided by Sobore    Well now - Happy H'ween to everyone! Here's hoping everyone plans on having some fun today, whether it's partaking in festivities for this 'holiday' or waiting for all that candy to be marked down for clearance tomorrow. The trick-or-treating experience has really changed since I was a wee young lad. The news didn't tell us when it was time to wrap things up - oh, no, we stayed out until it was pitch black out and every house in the neighborhood had extinguished its porch light.  Since I'm so old the idea of begging strangers for candy would be alarming, here are a few links to some interesting galleries related to Halloween. Be warned the third may be disturbing to some but fun for any horror movie fan! Cheers, everyone! 18 People Who Could Win a Gold Medal for Pumpkin Carving 20 People Who Took Pumkin Carving to a Whole New Level 12 Events From Horror Movies That Actually Happened

Lost in Translation

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Image courtesy of Engrish.com    Surely if you have scoured the Internet and stumbled upon a shared site like multimedia sharing sites like Reddit, Acid Cow, Bored Panda, Caveman Circus or even Chive. These are fun websites to see humorous content and I'd bet at some point you've seen one example of an image you can't wrap your head around . Captions can make or break an image even if the image itself doesn't make a lick of sense . A common funny thing is witnessing public signs or clothing in non-English speaking countries. There are professionals who translate the language but that skill varies and on the other hand some people can be careless ...or accidentally creative. Here's one of countless galleries across the web featuring some fun signs leaving us do a double-take. Translation Fails , hosted by Bored Panda Now don't get me wrong, Americans are guilty of this as well. I think a fair comparison would be some of the Ad Placement Fails we ...

Wacky Wednesday - Sauna Pants! Then and Now

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"As Seen on TV"    Since I haven't watched television in near 12 years I cannot report on when these, shall we say, interesting commercials come on for 5-30 minutes to pitch us a new product not sold in stores. Sometimes they do get us talking about them no matter how practical or useless they seem to be. It's probably the dramatizations played in black and white with over-the-top acting that may sway our opinions, too, but in many instances we can tell whether or not something is worth spending X easy payments of $19.99! Take these Sauna Pants from a while back, another 'solution' to aid in weight loss. Perhaps this sounded better in someone's head or on paper. The idea of thermal clothing isn't new nor was it at the time of this product's invention but wait - there's more! This very bulky, one-size-fits-all item has a 5 foot cord to plug into the wall where it will then disperse heat from the waist down to the thigh area with the ...
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Wacky Wednesday I've been sitting on park benches wrong this whole time. (Copyright Dr. Seuss, 1974)    Who here loves Dr. Seuss? One of the most coveted items in the classroom way back in (one of) my elementary school was a book of the same name , and it was essentially a beginner's version of a “Where’s Waldo” book with scenery spanning two pages. In them the idea was to see how many things we’d see were out of place or didn’t make sense. One could spend a good amount of time just letting the eyes wander across the amusing illustrations. At the time it was great and at some point, classmates began to fight over who got it first. I bring this up because since then and the broad release of the Internet, there haven’t been as many novelty products we enjoyed, unless one spent a ton of time watching informercials on cable television. When the ‘net finally did become how we see and use it today, there’s been no shortage of oddball things submitted from one part of th...

Old vs. New

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"Stock 83", by KarinClaessonArt on dA.    Personally, I never thought very much about why people take an interest in obscure architecture such as bridges and a log cabin out in the middle of a forest. What we shared in common was a fascination with things on a much larger scale leftover from the medieval era. In this case I’ll use a castle I found while rummaging around the stock image section of DeviantArt , my home away from home. The fun thing is finding one in the United States because we’re not sure if it’s authentic or just recently build and ‘aged’ to look old, to be used as a set piece in an upcoming movie, theme park ride, or someone’s odd hobby, like setting up handbag stores in the middle of deserts kind of odd.    Overseas, however, we know many of them are authentic. Spain, Syria, or all across Europe and up/down the British Isles these structures have stood the test of time and exposure to the elements, once serving a purpose: shelter, p...