Posted in
DAILY 7 Mar 2011
27394
Well let’s start our weekly grind once more. This time with wacky and unique events around the world. Happy Monday! Enjoy!
Posted in
CELEBS 7 Mar 2011
12317
Apparently, the star doesn’t want to live in her “Zen-like” house anymore and put it on sale. She bought her Beverly Hills home back in 2006 for $13.5 million and completely redesigned it with her designer. I wonder why she’s selling it? Maybe because it’s too big to live there alone?
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A sculpture by Glenn Fitzpatrick, a Gulf War veteran, showing his reflections of a war fought over “black gold.”
These are some amazing satellite photos captured by NASA of cities that show how quickly they are expanding. Cities are expanding in the US and all over the world at rate that has never been seen before in history.
LAS VEGAS, USA, 1984
If you think you are having a bad hair day stop and check out this oddly bizarre museum where hair is always in top form.
Do you remember an animated movie Up where two characters fly in a house? National Geographic proved that a flying house can be a reality. Engineers, scientists and balloon pilots used 300 weather balloons to launch a 16’ X 16’ house into the air. They set a new world record for the biggest balloon cluster flight. The house was floating for about an hour, going 10,000 feet high.
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Posted in
CELEBS 7 Mar 2011
27048
These celebrities have no eyebrows. Obviously, the photos have been retouched to give the viewer an idea of what these beautiful celebrities would look like without eyebrows. Although they are rather funny, they don’t look all that bad.
Justin Timberlake
Company Inventist presented a compact self-balancing electric unicycle. The new “vehicle” was named Solowheel. It weighs only 20 pounds and very portable, it consists of one wheel with a fold-up foot platform on either side. The unicycle reaches a top speed of 12mph.
Black and white photos of post-war Berlin.
These are a collection of two headed animals. They seem perfectly normal other than the fact that they have two heads. I have heard that many of these two-headed animals lead perfectly normal lives.
Sometimes it is not easy to draw from looking at an object or a landscape, let alone to reproduce images from memory. Stephen Wiltshire, 36, also called “the human camera” draws city skylines from memory. What impresses the most is their complexity and precision.
"Globe of London"
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