Catopedia

Filed under “Life
by Adam at 7:31 AM

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Bibi posted a slew of cat links this morning, the most interesting of which for me was the Messybeast Cat Resource Archive. Lots of good info here for the new cat parent. Since Riley is my first cat, I’m finding a lot of good stuff here that I really needed to know.

Somebody Set Up Us the Bomb

Filed under “Politics
by Adam at 1:41 AM

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North Korea finally up and told the world that they have nukes, and they aren’t about to give them up.

Start practicing your duck-and-cover, boys and girls!

The Sideshow Six

Filed under “Oddities,” “Writing,” and “Life
by Adam at 8:23 AM

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I had a strange dream some time early this morning about a group of Depression-era superheroes masquerading as carnival sideshow performers.

There were six of them, five that were obvious “freaks” and one who acted as the barker and manager of the group primarily because he could most easily pass as “normal.” There was Iron Man, the “world’s strongest human”; the Vanishing Lady; The Rubber Man (who stands out in my memory for looking like a gaunt and lanky apprentice undertaker in an ill-fitting Vaudeville costume); the Human Torch; and Impervio the Invulnerable.

The team made their way around the Dust Bowl, exercising their crime solving abilities and exacting vigilante justice. Despite their good intentions and heroic deeds, they were often met with a combination of awe and suspicion by the townsfolk.

For the curious, the last operating sideshow in America appears to be the Coney Island Circus Sideshow in Coney Island, NY. The focus, of course, has moved away from “human curiosities” and toward “made freaks” and performers.

Sounds like a decent plot for a story or comic. Has this been done before?

Update:

According to Boing Boing, P.T. Barnum’s “American Museum” — lost in an 1865 fire — has been put on the web. An interesting mix of oddities, fakes, showmanship, sensationalism and bullshit, the museum lived in the shadowland between 19th century superstition and the 20th century’s embrace of science. This combination was always a hallmark of Barnum’s style.

The site consists mostly of several large Flash movies, so those without broadband should be prepared for a wait. There are also many archived photos and documents to peruse with background on the museum and its exhibits. Along with the museum tour and background information, there’s also an interactive mystery: Barnum entrusts you with the key to the museum mere hours before the fire, asking you to investigate his fears that someone has a dire plot against the establishment.

Eiffel Tower Photos Now Subject to Copyright Restrictions

Filed under “Oddities,” “Photography,” and “Travel
by Adam at 12:03 PM

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Want to publish some great nighttime shots of the famous Parisian landmark?

It’ll cost ya.

(Props: Gideon Rosenblatt’s Blog)

Google Maps

Filed under “Web Links” and “Software
by Adam at 6:59 PM

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Google has thrown their hat into the online map ring. It makes a surprisingly good combination, allowing you to type in searches like “malls in Wichita, KS” or “pizzerias near LAX” and get meaningful results.

Some results are still pretty random. I changed one of the links above — which used to be for “gas in ponca city, ok” — when I realized that what it had found was a bunch of oil and natural gas companies. Changing it to “gas stations in ponca city, ok” suddenly “narrowed” the map down to the entire north-central Oklahoma area, which apparently only has ten gas stations to its name. It’s a promising start, however, and I’ll be interested to see where Google takes this.

(Props: Stopdesign’s linklog)