Accidental Optical Illusions In Everyday Things

Boredpanda.com

You don’t necessarily need to go to a special museum, art gallery or hall of mirrors to experience some mind-bending optical illusions, take a look around you, they happen all the time in everyday life! 

This luxury space hotel could be up and running in four years

NBC

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If road trips, theme parks, and beach resorts just don’t do it for you, how about a stay in a swanky space hotel?

A Silicon Valley startup called Orion Span yesterday announced plans to open a luxury hotel in low-Earth orbit by 2022, and you can reserve a room for $80,000. Just be aware that that figure is only a down payment for a 12-day stay, which runs a stratospheric $9.5 million per person.

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Dubbed Aurora Station, the orbiting inn will offer space tourists with deep pockets a chance to experience life like an astronaut. “That experience entails…growing food in space, running science experiments, doing astronaut certification,” said Orion Span CEO Frank Bunger. “At the end of the trip, we’re going to give them a hero’s welcome back home as well.”

But it won’t all be hard work. In addition to witnessing luminous auroras against the blackness of space and gazing down on Earth as it passes below at a distance of 200 miles, guests will be able to enjoy an onboard “holodeck” inspired by the one known to fans of “Star Trek.” And if you like sunrises and sunsets, you’re in luck: Guests will be able to see more than a dozen of each every day.

Orion Span said Aurora Station will be able to accommodate four guests at a time, plus two crew members to make sure things go smoothly. The company provided scant details about how guests will get to and from the hotel, but said they are evaluating potential partners now.

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The Rent is Too Damn High Party

The video is from 2010. Jimmy McMillan is fighting for the rights of blue collar people in New York City who can barely afford the insanely high rent in the city.

I watched a documentary from 2017 that covered the gentrification of the New York City boroughs  of Harlem and Brooklyn.  In a part of Brooklyn the mean annual income is $45,000, the average rent in the same area is $33,000.  70 percent of income has to be used towards rent. Not a good scenario. Somebody is making fistfuls of money by creating hardship for the vast majority.

Henry and Baloo: Dog and cat travel companions gain cult following

BBC

Cat asleep on top of dog's head, with dog looking into cameraImage copyrightCYNTHIA BENNETT

Best friends Henry and Baloo have a lot in common – they have both been rescued and now enjoy long walks in the great outdoors. What makes them special to their many fans is that they are a dog and cat travelling duo.

Their unlikely friendship and hiking trips around the beautiful mountainous landscapes of Colorado have gained the pair a cult social media following.

Hundreds of thousands of people follow their adventures on the photo-sharing platform Instagram.

For owners Cynthia Bennett and Andre Sibilsky, their popularity is surreal.

Cat lying on top of dog's head in front of mountain landscape copyrightCYNTHIA BENNETT
Image captionBaloo is known for his unusual sleeping position – on top of Henry’s head

Cynthia and Andre met in Boston, but as New Hampshire and Texas natives, the couple say they are both nature lovers who were destined to move away from city life.

“We wanted to head west, toward bigger mountains. We came upon Colorado and moved on a whim, there wasn’t a lot of planning involved,” Cynthia told the BBC.

The pair started hiking regularly and once settled, decided to extend their family by adopting a dog.

Henry – a tall and lanky German Shepherd, Husky, Boxer, Staffordshire Terrier and Aussie mix – stood out right away.

The couple pose for a selfie in a tent with the two animalsImage copyrightCYNTHIA BENNETT
Image captionThe animals’ popularity has allowed the couple to pursue their love of the outdoors

“He was the same age as all the other puppies but twice the size. As soon as I got into the pen to see him, he crawled onto my lap and went belly up,” Cynthia explains, laughing.

“Andre knew then we were taking him home. I feel like he chose us in a way.”

Cynthia’s family, she says, are dumbfounded by their popularity.

“I told my grandfather, who is my best friend. He’s very outdoorsy and natural so we’ve always been really close. He thinks it’s mind-blowing.”

Andre works a typical office job in finance, but the popularity of the Instagram account has led Cynthia to scale back on her work in event marketing and focus more on updating the account and her passion for photography.

“Taking a leap as an artist is very scary and it’s not very stable in the long side of things, but I tell my followers all the time you are changing my life and allowing me to do what I love,” Cynthia says.

Dog stands on top of hilly landscape with cat on top of himImage copyrightCYNTHIA BENNETT
Image captionCynthia points out to followers that Baloo is not strapped in any way to Henry
“It’s also giving Henry and Baloo a better life, I get more time off to travel and be with them.”It is not all positive, however. Popularity has brought on some backlash against the couple’s alternative outdoor-based lifestyle, according to Cynthia.

“As soon as you get well known, you get the other side – which has been different to deal with.

“I’m like, why are you attacking a dog and a cat? I just don’t get it.”

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But she says the support far outweighs the negativity.

Through the social platform they have been able to connect with others, such as people in the so-called “vanlife” community, who receive similar complaints and criticism over their nomadic lifestyles.

“You just have to ignore it and let it wash over you. You just read the hundreds of other comments that say Henry and Baloo brighten up their day.”

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Gigantic Gator in Florida

A woman walking near the wetlands of Florida captured footage of what may be the biggest alligator ever seen or filmed in the wild.

Estimated to be a jaw-dropping 15 feet long, the monstrous gator was spotted by astounded witness Marcy Clarius in the city of Delray Beach.

Fortunately, she was able to document the nightmarish moment that the giant gator emerged from the water as Clarius exclaimed “oh, my God!”

For comparison’s sake, the smaller alligator seen next to the creature in the footage is a popular denizen of the wetlands, nicknamed ‘George,’ that is thought to measure nine feet long.

The current record for the largest gator found in Florida is 14 feet, three-and-a-half inches, meaning that Clarius’ creature could be the new champion, provided some brave soul steps forward and offers to measure it.

California’s Secret Oil Islands

Not too far off the coast of Long Beach, California, are a set of four artificial islands containing towering white buildings set amidst palm trees and shrubs and waterfalls, all dramatically lit by colorful lights at night. From the nearby shore, the man-made islands appear to be occupied by some sort of high priced condos or resorts. But truth is—they are just a façade camouflaging huge oil-drilling operations in the bay.

Disguising industrial infrastructures so that they blend with the environment is nothing new. The city of Toronto has been dressing up electric substations into quiet little houses for more than a century. Similarly, cities such as New York, Paris and London hide ventilation shafts and railway tracks behind phony walls and faux buildings. These fakeries are rarely advertised, instead left to be discovered by curious citizens.

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The building of Long Beach’s THUMS Islands, however, was a much publicized project.

THUMS stands for Texaco, Humble (now Exxon), Union Oil, Mobil, and Shell—the five companies that formed a consortium to oversee drilling operations in the San Pedro Bay. The islands were built in 1965 at an estimated cost of $22 million. More than 640,000 tons of boulders, some as large as five tons each, were brought from Catalina Island and used to build the perimeters of the islands, starting from the floor of the harbor, some 30-40 meters deep. The islands were then filled with sand dredged from the bottom of the harbor floor. The next step was landscaping and equipment installation.

When Long Beach voters gave the go-ahead to the ambitious plan of tapping into the oil resources located offshore, part of the arrangement was that the islands should be designed to appear as tropical settings and that they should hide the actual drilling operations.

“The islands were required to blend in with the local landscape and scenery. The guiding principle was that the islands were to enhance, rather than detract from, the harbor’s natural beauty,” said Frank Komin, executive vice president of southern operations for California Resources Corporation, the company that currently owns the islands.

The islands were designed by Joseph Linesch, who also helped design landscaping at Disneyland. Palm trees were planted on the exterior. Concrete facades that hide the derricks also served the purpose of bouncing industrial noise away from the residents living nearby.

The THUMS Islands are also known as the Astronaut Islands, having been renamed in honor of four American astronauts who lost their lives in the service of NASA—Theodore C. Freeman, Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger B. Chaffee. The latter three were Apollo 1 astronauts who had perished in a fire accident at the launch pad.

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The island on the right is  Island Grissom, one of the THUMS offshore oil platforms.

 

Falcon Lake UFO Incident gets its own coin from the Royal Canadian Mint

It was just around lunchtime, so the story goes, when Stefan Michalak saw several unusual silver objects cross the sky in Manitoba’s Whiteshell Provincial Park.

It was May 20, 1967, and Michalak, an avid rock collector, was searching for new specimens near the shores of Falcon Lake.

What unfolded that day would go down in Canadian history as one of the country’s best-documented UFO encounters – one that’s now commemorated in a limited-edition coin from the Royal Canadian Mint.

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But at the time, Michalak didn’t know what to make of the strange silver objects, even as one of them landed on a rocky outcropping nearby.

So he decided to pull out some paper and sketch the object, according to author Chris Rutkowski, who detailed the encounter in the book “When They Appeared.”

“He thought it was some sort of American secret Apollo moon landing thing that got astray,” Rutkowski said.

Michalak was perplexed by what he saw, so he walked over and touched the side of the object. It was so hot, it burned his glove.

That’s when, rather suddenly, the object shot back into the sky.

“Then this thing took off and blasted a hot gas on him, setting his clothes on fire, injuring him and then giving him some burns on his abdomen as well,” Rutkowski said.

The perplexing incident has fascinated Manitobans for years. Investigations were carried out by the RCMP, the Canadian Forces and U.S. officials. None have conclusively determined what happened.

Regardless, the Falcon Lake incident, as it’s come to be known, has cemented itself in Canadian lore for 51 years.

So it seemed only natural to immortalize the event in a collectable coin, said Allison Crawford, a spokesperson for the Mint.

“The Royal Canadian Mint is known for having polar bears and maple leaves and beautiful natural settings on coins, but we also do a lot of coins that reflect Canada’s culture. And some of our best Canadian stories are actually supernatural stories,” she said, citing the Ogopogo in Lake Okanagan and Quebec’s werewolf-like loup-garou.

“We wanted to share that story with the rest of the country.”

The coin has a $20 value but retails for $129.95. Made from pure silver, the one-ounce coin comes with a black light that, when shone on the oblong currency, reveals the yellowish blast that burned Michalak.

Only 4,000 of the coins will be produced, making the currency highly collectible, Crawford said.

The unusual coin has drawn new attention to an unusual incident that, for believers, represents a significant moment in Canadian UFO history.

“It’s an interesting case, because you have physical evidence as well as the witness’ story,” Rutkowski said.

Five months after the Falcon Lake incident, residents of Shag Harbour, N.S. watched as an 18-metre wide, saucer-shaped aircraft fell from the sky and crashed into the water. Before officials could reach it, the craft either submerged or disappeared.

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Artist’s impression from Michalak’s description

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Michalak with the burns on his chest

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