Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Anime characters made out of paper for adults

Our hero creates anime characters out of paper , and then mocks them , torturing , killing , just like in horror movies . Look carefully, too much violence over the paper , for adults only











































Monday, September 27, 2010

Flying Video Camera



A Chinese man used a Flying Video Camera Remote Controlled, spy cameras wireless model plane to record his friend's wedding.

Lao Wu, from Wuhan, spent 30,000 Yuan (nearly £3,000) buying parts ahead of the big day.

The plane, named UFO, weighs 1kg, has four propellers and landing legs, and is capable of flying as high as 10 stories.

Wu, an amateur plane designer for more than 20 years, said: "Half a year ago I read news on the internet that some foreigners tried to build a UFO, so I tried myself.

"The initial trails didn't have good video pictures until I installed it a shock absorber.

"It's very convenient, as I can remote control the plane to shoot at any angle, while I adjust its flying track through the wireless monitor on hand."

Source : Clipmarks

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Edward Gorey House Museum



Morbid Anatomy Joanna Ebenstein recently visited the Edward Gorey Museum in Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts.

The home has, sadly, largely been cleared of Gorey's legendary clutter--though a few tantalizing fragments from his private collection can be found scattered about--and transformed into a compact house-museum dedicated to the man's life and work.

Part of me wishes they had simply left the place as it was at Gorey's death, and allowed visitors the opportunity to wander around the famously idiosyncratic environment in which the man produced so many of his iconic works. However, I was quickly won over by the museum's small-town- quirky charm, and the pretty great displays, which included original drawings and half-finished inked works, reproductions of his sketchbooks, amazing ephemera and souvenirs from Mystery and his Broadway production of Dracula, one of his raccoon fur coats, many of his Doubleday book covers, a number of his handmade stuffed animals, many coveted rare works such as his fantastic peepshow, and scores of other artifacts. The gift-shop was also seriously incredible--with scores of Gorey-themed souvenirs I had never seen before--and the folks running the museum were lovely to talk to, knowledgeable and passionately devoted to the man and his work.
















Source : Morbid Anatomy

Dodgeball Games Set World Record



The world's biggest Dodgeball Games Team has taken place in the California with more than 1,700 students hurling rubber balls at each other.

well-known form of team sport with modified rules that is often played in physical education classes and has been featured in a movie

Students came up with the idea for the game because they wanted to Organise a mass-participation event and thought they may as well break a Guinness record while they were at it.

After looking at the record books, the student from the University of California decided the dodgeball record - which stood at just 1,198 - was easily beatable.

For anyone who wasn't subjected to ritual humiliation by dodgeball, the aim of the game is to hit all the members of the opposing team by throwing the ball at them.



Source : Newslite Via University of California

Common Cents



Common Cents One Hundred Million Pennies are 100,000,000 in digits or $1 million in dollars. Non-profit organization called Common Cents placed all this money at the Penny Harvest at Rockefeller Center.

national educational, not-for-profit organization, which specializes in creating and managing service-learning programs for young people between the ages of four and 14. Common Cent's most popular and best known program is The Penny Harvest, the largest child philanthropy program in the United States

The organization's co-founder and Executive Director is Teddy Gross. Common Cents receives major funding from several major foundations and the government including: The Ford Foundation, Foundation for Jewish Community, JPMorgan Chase, The New York City Council, The New York City Department of Education.