[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

View of the National House from the town square

For nearly 200 years, a quaint bed and breakfast in a nubilous, Halloween-obsessed small town has watched the state of Michigan grow up. The Mann's Inn opened the New Year's Eve prior to Michigan being granted statehood, hosting the first ball ever held in the town of Marshall. It had been constructed with local clay and timber, making it a point of local pride. Its business model: to host weary stagecoach travelers making the long and exhausting journey from cities like Detroit and Toronto to Chicago. For roughly a decade, it succeeded wildly in doing just that, as well as hosting miscellaneous civic functions such as county meetings. 

The hotel changed with the times when the Central Railroad of Michigan, originally a doomed private rail project, was bailed out by the newly formed State of Michigan and lay tracks past the hotel on the same route the stagecoaches had taken. The National House Inn, as it had been renamed by that point, also hosted travelers on another kind of railroad. Though it was too far from the Civil War's front lines to contribute much, the town of Marshall acted decisively to protect those who arrived there escaping from slavery, even installing a secret room into the basement for them to hide in. 

After the Civil War concluded, the National House Inn fell behind the very technologies which had once delivered its customers. Sleeper cars and other comforts replaced the need for hotels on the railway, and faster trains meant even those competitive opportunities were less common; why stay at a hotel when the trip would take less than a day? 

As the Victorian era came to a close, the National House underwent a radical transformation. It spent the waning decades of the 19th century serving as a factory for windmills, a popular commodity in the region, as well as making other axled objects like wagons. 

With a new century came new opportunities, and in 1902 the building changed hands and purpose for yet another time. From the inauguration of Theodore Roosevelt to the dawn of household computers, the National House was "Dean's Flats," a set of luxury apartments. Unfortunately, those apartments grew less and less luxurious as innovations like the air conditioner left the already-septuagenarian building behind. Bootleggers took advantage of the state of the facility, stashing liquors and other illicit substances in the secret room. 

Dedicated preservationists and historians rallied to protect the building, successfully soliciting investments from the community to restore it. On the day of Thanksgiving in 1976, the National House was officially back and ready to resume serving as a cornerstone of the city of Marshall. Today, its prices sit over $200 per night - a far cry from the $2 per week it cost at its advent - but that new price includes amenities like running water, working outlets, internet access, and like any good hotel a coterie of ghosts

full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: Green Hornet (1960’s and 2011 versions), Batman (1960’s), Al Hirt (musician), Bruce Lee
Pairings/Characters: Gen; Britt Reid | Green Hornet, Kato, Bruce Wayne | Batman, Dick Grayson | Robin, cameo by Beatrix Kiddo | The Bride (Kill Bill), Black Beauty is practically a character, right?
Rating: General Audiences
Length: 3:03
Content Notes: Rapid flickering image shifts; earworm hazard.
Creator Links: (Instagram) [instagram.com profile] Dorodigital; (YouTube) [youtube.com profile] Dorodigital
Theme: Amnesty, Crossovers & Fusions, FANCAKE IS FIFTEEN, Fandom Classics, Fanvids, Older Fandoms, Underloved Works

Summary: What started out as an attempt to learn flight of the bumble bee on the trumpet evolved into a fascination with the green hornet theme song. Although the show featured one of my favorite Martial Artist ..Bruce lee..the main attraction for me was the frentic trumpet solo performed by another hero of mine Mr. Al hirt. This song was also used in the motor cycle scene in kill bill. I was delighted to learn that they were making a movie version in 2011 starring Seth Rogen and Jay Chou..Alas there could be only one Bruce lee as well as one Al hirt. However I decided to perform this cover in tribute to Al and Bruce...Enjoy

Reccer's Notes: Two great tastes that taste great together: against a montage of thrilling stunts and snappy dialogue, trumpeter Ricardo Dowridge multiplies himself into an orchestra to celebrate his musical and martial heroes.

Fanwork Links:



One Man’s Green Hornet.mpg, by Ricardo Dowridge: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8UVF7tkdRw
jesse_the_k: chainmail close up (links)
[personal profile] jesse_the_k

I've observed hockey RPF fandom from an immeasurable distance, and I still got a kick out of this post:

https://marina.dreamwidth.org/1576715.html

[personal profile] marina was in hockey fandom, spent her childhood in Ukraine, knows much about filing serial numbers, and has definite opinions about vodka.

I'm reading reading reading.

Hi!

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Pješački most is a modern pedestrian bridge connecting the old town of Trogir to the coast. Inspired by Trogir’s shipbuilding heritage, its sleek steel design doesn’t block views of the UNESCO-listed area.

The nets on the bridge create fun experiences for both children and adults, making it more than just a crossing—it’s a social spot, especially in the evening. Remarkably, it was installed in just one day in December 2024, costing only 1 million euros.

andrewducker: (Teddy of Borg)
[personal profile] andrewducker
About a month ago Gideon watched a bunch of videos about Minecraft, asked if he could play it on her tablet, got a few pointers from me to get him going and then dove in and started building stuff. At an impressive rate considering that he can't read any word more than 4 letters long.

Yesterday I mentioned Minecraft to Sophia, and she showed interest, so I set her up on my desktop and she got stuck in. She's asked for more help than Gideon has, but has been happily building herself an underground house. And just now I wanderd into my office to see her on the desktop and Gideon sitting on the floor with his tablet, with the two of them intermittently showing each other cool things that they'd found.

So tonight, after they're asleep, I'm going to set them both up for online play, and rent a realm*, so that they can be in the same world with each other.



*I am totally willing to pay £3.99 per month to not have to maintain my own server.
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] fancake
Fandom: The Nightmare Before Christmas, Corpse Bride, Oingo Boingo
Pairings/Characters: Gen; background F->M (Emily ->Victor); Jack Skellington, Bonejangles, and the whole Halloween Town and Underworld crews.
Rating: Teen and Up
Length: 4:22
Content Notes: canon-typical death, undeath, decay, dismemberment, creepy-crawlies, monsters, slapstick violence, and Body Horror.
Creator Links: (YouTube) [youtube.com profile] DylanWhitesChannel (formerly [youtube.com profile] weareactualsize)
Theme: Amnesty, Crossovers & Fusions, FANCAKE IS FIFTEEN, Fandom Classics, Fanvids, Older Fandoms

Summary: Oingo Boingo's "Dead Man's Party" mashed with "The Nightmare Before Christmas" and "Corpse Bride." All copyrights held by original owners. Happy Halloween.
(HD re-edit from my weareactualsize channel)


Reccer's Notes: Although this repost is dated 27 October 2014, the original on White’s now-defunct previous channel dates from circa 2010. This fusion is a relentless tour-de-force of music synced to visuals synced to lyrics; Danny Elfman’s having scored both movies creates a certain built-in compatibility, and Oingo Boingo’s Halloween anthem makes for an Elfman trifecta.

Fanwork Links:


Dead Man’s Party, by Dylan White: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndhDaEqjKAc

Fountain Handprints in Bath, England

Dec. 13th, 2025 02:00 pm
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Handprint Fountain

When one thinks of the town of Bath, in the west of England, they may immediately have visions of Jane Austen (1775 -1817) and the Regency period (1811 - 1820). What they may not associate with this quaint municipality is that it is home to one of the country's longest established playhouses, the Theatre Royal.

Opened in 1805, for over two centuries the Theatre Royal has staged numerous productions and showcased the talents of countless performers. It has survived fires, wars, and economic downturns. The latter would see the great British actor Peter Ustinov (1921 -2004) lending a hand in raising monies to keep the lights on.

In the late 1990s a studio was dedicated in his honor. Perhaps a part of his fund raising scheme was a fountain located nearby, in the Seven Dials Courtyard, with a collection of sixteen handprints and signatures fabricated in brass. Much in the vain of the prints found at Grauman's Chinese Theatre,  Los Angeles, these denote famous British actors of both stage and screen. These include the names of such stars as Joan Collins, Derek Jacobi, and Haley Mills.

Pandemic Garden Club

Dec. 13th, 2025 11:32 am
scrubjayspeaks: macro photograph of ladybug climbing a blade of grass (garden)
[personal profile] scrubjayspeaks
Welcome to the December edition of Pandemic Garden Club! Growing good things in strange times!

Anyone is welcome to comment with what they're growing right now, things they would like to try, problems they're encountering, and questions they have. Share resources, answer questions, shout encouragement.

As for myself...

Read more... )
runpunkrun: silverware laid out on a cloth napkin (gather yon utensils)
[personal profile] runpunkrun
We have these envelopes I use to half-assedly organize coupons. After our local Kroger analogue recently remodeled, I had to rename some of the envelopes because they dissolved the "natural" section—where I did most of my dairy-free, gluten-free shopping—and moved those products around the store.

So now the "deli & meat" envelope has "dairy & non-dairy" added to it, which amuses me every time I get it out because "dairy & non-dairy" encompasses everything in the universe.
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

During the 11-years war between Norway and Sweden (1709–1720), Oslo (then Christiania) was invaded. The Norwegian forces let the Swedes take the city, and retreated to the highly protected Akershus Fortress. 

Despite their best efforts, the Swedes were not able to capture the fortress due to heavy fighting. It was during this period of intense fighting that a cannonball from Akershus was fired and got implanted in the wall of a building on the corner of Tollbugata and Dronningens st. Although this building was eventually torn down, the current building, from the early 1900s, had the cannonball mounted in the same spot.  

What, to absolutely EVERYONE???

Dec. 13th, 2025 04:32 pm
oursin: Books stacked on shelves, piled up on floor, rocking chair in foreground (books)
[personal profile] oursin

I think this is an absolutely terrible idea, and that they should be giving book tokens, and, okay, maybe recommendations, but letting people choose their books:

30 authors on the books they give to everyone

I am in particular stunned by the choices of Some People, e.g. Colm Tóibín's Christmas Downer:

There is a book I buy as a present that never goes out of fashion. It is The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford.... the extraordinary plot creeps up and bites you before you know where you are. The narrative curls and twists; the narrator knows too much or too little. But at some point the appalling and ingenious nature of the treachery – what is called “cheating” nowadays – becomes apparent and you feel that you have been let in on some intriguing and explosive secret. It is perfect, thus, for Christmas.

I am also beswozzled by what Tessa Hadley considers comfort reading: Rumer Godden??? Okay, some of her works fall into that category, but on the whole I would not consider the ones she does name - The River in particular - exactly comforting.

Much as I love them, I would not press into anyone's hands Middlemarch, The Fountain Overflows, Cold Comfort Farm or The Pursuit of Love, urging that they they must read this.

I am reminded of GB Shaw's rewrite of the Golden Rule, about not doing to others as you would be done by, as tastes differ.

Take it away, Sly and the Family Stone!

tyger: Terra.  Text: Terra (Terra)
[personal profile] tyger

I am at A's place!

Turns out doing an overnight is actually an EXCELLENT test run of new computer setups, because I've ALREADY figured out quite a few things I need to change/prep for:

Lots of nerdery goes here. )

IN ANY CASE. In non-new-computer-related news, I did do some other stuff today! I got Mama to drop me off at the place I got my parents snack-presents from last year, and got my father some more of the freeze dried strawberries he absolutely adored. (And some licorice for Mama, too.) I also got some snacks for me, of course!

Still nothing for Sibling, though. :/ I had to walk past somewhere that sold game stuff on the way back, so I poked my nose in there, but nothing stood out. I thought if nothing else I could get some MtG boosters, but they were all out of the newest set! Boo! And since I don't keep up with MtG stuff I have no idea what sets are still legal for pro-level play soooo I didn't want to go back to one of the other sets. The rotation stuff is. Confusing. :/

I also saw the Stardew Valley board game, but it was Extremely Expensive so I didn't look at it in detail. Just. Nope. I am not a board game player, really, and that's the only reason you'd spend lots on a game like that I think. Not just a cool merch thing hahahaha. (Also I have some extremely cool fanart that was much less expensive AND super pretty, so, you know, I'm fine with my priorities.)

A's cats are super cute as usual, too! Kitty is of course Made Of Grump, but that's her usual state so it's fine. I have eaten all of the salami here AND there were fresh peas so I ate all of those, too... >>;; Also had a random pie for tea, and it was beef and CHEESE! :O Amazing! And so delicious!

I did, however, forget my toothbrush & related stuff, so WHOOPS. I'mma just hope that one night of scrubbing with my finger (and flossing if there's some in the cupboards) will be okay, heh. If I was here longer of course I'd just go buy one, but something to keep in mind! (Also less annoying than forgetting my hairbrush. Or underwear. I know this from experience! |D)

umadoshi: (Christmas - outdoor lights (girlboheme))
[personal profile] umadoshi
Luck was not with us in the first attempt at clementines this year. (The batch we got are far from inedible, at least, but...not very good.) They're such a gamble these years. :/

Our new freezer arrived a week ago, and the plan is to finally get it in place today once [personal profile] scruloose gets back from a market run. That hasn't happened yet due to a combination of factors and timing, the biggest of which is the fact that it'll require shifting some things out of the garage onto the driveway to make room for us to work with two upright freezers in play. ([personal profile] scruloose is going to take a stab at moving the old one out of its place without emptying it, via a hand cart, but we have no idea how likely that is to actually work. It'd sure be convenient, though.)

My hair is dyed! It is. Um. Very dark. By which I mean it's not so much dark purple as "functionally black with some purple highlights that are probably some of my silver hair, but there's less of that than there is silver, so it's a little confusing". Oh, well. It looks fine, other than maybe making me look a bit washed out, and I don't much care about that.

(I might care more when I finally get [personal profile] scruloose to take a headshot of me to send HR at Dayjob so they can update my long-expired work pass. [Part of why I decided to finally just go ahead and dye my hair was in the name of having it done for this photo.] These days, the process involves just filling out a form and emailing that and a photo that meets their technical requirements to the department handling passes and also to my boss, presumably so the boss can look at the photo and confirm "yes, that is the employee in question". But this means we can make potentially-endless attempts at getting a photo I don't hate, and honestly, if I can live with the horror of my provincial ID photo, I can probably live with just about anything.)

A few links:

--[personal profile] mrissa's annual lussekatter posts are always good for my heart.

--Jenny Hamilton's "Anatomy of a Sex Scene: Heated Rivalry Edition" (covering ep. 1-2).

--"‘Pushing Daisies’ Season 3 In The Works, Says Creator Bryan Fuller".
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Kirchberg is a district located north-east of Luxembourg City centre, from which it is separated by the Alzette Valley. Urbanised from the 1960s onwards, the district was designed as the capital's business centre and quickly became home to the buildings of several European institutions (Court of Justice of the European Union, Secretariat-General of the European Parliament, European Investment Bank (EIB), etc.). Its development was intended to be exemplary, with urbanisation that gives pride of place to green spaces, high-quality architecture and the integration of public works of art.

The Mudam - Musée d'Art moderne Grand-Duc Jean - fits perfectly into this dynamic: Ieoh Ming Pei's building is integrated into the ruins of a 19th-century fort - Fort Thüngen - and is surrounded by pedestrian areas. The museum is surrounded by several contemporary artworks that complement the neighbourhood's collection. Among these works is ‘The Present’ by Maria Anwander. And if it is here today, it is thanks to a tour de force by the artist.

In 2012, the Casino Luxembourg – Forum d'Art Contemporain welcomed the Austrian artist as artist-in-residence. It was on this occasion that she placed the work on the Place d'Arme on the morning of 28 June 2012. The problem was that the city had not been notified of this installation. After workers reported this strange discovery, in accordance with the law, the city became the owner of this unexpected deposit: the work was removed during the morning and stored.

Although the outcome seemed to be a fiasco, it actually worked perfectly: through this act of disobedience, the artist managed to force the city to acquire one of her works of art. Through this action, she reversed the usual mechanisms by which cities decide to acquire works of art to decorate public spaces. Contrary to what one might have expected, the city of Luxembourg appreciated this artistic tour de force: it officially accepted the gift – ‘The Present’ – shortly afterwards and the work joined the Mudam.

This method of forced acquisition appears to be unique among national art institutions. Its exhibition in Dräi Eechelen Park therefore pays tribute to the artist's audacity and returns the work to the public space (where it is destined to be installed). Exposed to the elements, it has never been restored in order to express the passage of time through the slow deterioration of the stone.

Nominations Opening Soon!

Dec. 13th, 2025 10:02 am
candyheartsex: pink and white flowers (Default)
[personal profile] candyheartsex
The pinned post at the top of the journal now shows the schedule for 2025/2026!

The nomination window will be a little longer this year because approvals will be slower on some days, so nominations will open December 17, 12:01 AM EST.

Huh

Dec. 13th, 2025 09:39 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
So, I asked on Bluesky:

Aside from Larry Correia, are there any big name Baen authors who debuted at Baen, after Jim Baen's death?

(So, Tim Powers wouldn't count because he debuted not at Baen and also long before JB died)


I got three names: Chuck Gannon, Jason Cordova and Mike Kupari. Gannon actually debuted at Baen in 1994 but only two (I think) short pieces, after which there was a long delay until his novels began appearing. I don't know the other two but SF is huge and it's perfectly possible for me to overlook BNAs. Still, granting all three, with LC that makes four... and in 2028, Toni Weisskopf will have been running Baen for as long as Jim Baen did.

This could, of course, be the natural consequence of the Del Monte approach.

[added later]

Del Monte

Mamore Gap in Ireland

Dec. 13th, 2025 08:00 am
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Scenic drive through Mamore Gap

Mamore Gap cuts through the Urris Hills like a secret doorway, a steep and winding road that suddenly opens onto a panorama of raw Donegal beauty. From the crest, the Atlantic glimmers far below while rugged slopes tumble down to patchwork fields and quiet villages, a view that feels both endless and timeless. At the summit, a serene statue of Our Lady stands beside St. Eigne’s Holy Well, reminders of the generations who came here in pilgrimage, climbing the mountain to pray where the sky feels close and the land itself seems sacred.

Just beyond the shrines lies Mamore’s most curious treasure — the so-called “magic road,” where cars left in neutral appear to roll uphill and even water seems to flow the wrong way. The secret, of course, is a clever optical illusion, but for a moment it feels as though the laws of nature have been suspended. Between the staggering scenery, the quiet devotion of the grotto, and the playful trick of the landscape, Mamore Gap manages to be both moving and mischievous — a road that truly has a spirit of its own.

November 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
23456 78
9101112131415
16171819202122
2324 2526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 13th, 2025 11:35 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios