Art & Design Magazine

Ventipop #233 :: Kinky Karma, Nordic Noir & The Prison Inside Me

By Ventipop @ventipop
"We are like butterflies who flutter for a day and think it is forever."
- Sagan HERE ARE THE MOST INTERESTING, HUMOROUS AND INSPIRING THINGS I FOUND ON THE NET THIS WEEK. IF YOU ENJOY, IT WOULD BE AWESOME IF YOU WOULD HELP SPREAD THE WORD ABOUT VENTIPOP AND SHARE WITH A FRIEND.

It's A Small World After All

  • South Korea - For the past five years, a mock prison facility in Hongcheon, South Korea, has been locking up paying "inmates" for brief stays in simple cells where mobile devices are prohibited, talking with other participants is not allowed, and no clocks can be found. Welcome to The Prison Inside Me

  • Ancient Rome - "Evidence from an archaeological dig has found," wrote Telegraph science correspondent Richard Alleyne in 2012, "that legionnaires wore socks with sandals" - ancient Roman legionnaires, that is. "Rust on a nail from a Roman sandal found in newly discovered ruins in North Yorkshire appears to contain fibres which could suggest that a sock-type garment was being worn."

  • Japan - In Japan, the swastika still appears on maps and buildings, in its original unflipped form, as a way of designating a variety of positive meanings including good luck, prosperity, and eternity. For Westerners, the swastika induces feelings of disgust and remorse; the tacit acknowledgement that we must not let evil consume us again. Japan is the host country for the 2020 Olympics. Should Japan modify how it culturally displays swastikas before taking the world stage? The debate is on.

"If this is coffee, please bring me some tea; but if this is tea, please bring me some coffee."
- Abraham Lincoln

Snaps & Buckles & Things

Years ago, I was working in a dive shop when this little old lady with a British accent came into the store and asked if I could direct her to the craft store located in the same shopping center. I told her where it was and after a brief back and forth, she thanked me and in her thickest Hogwart's sounding accent said this very line: "Well, I'm off for some snaps & buckles & things". I've been quoting it ever since. Sometimes it's ok if you're the only one that gets the joke. After all, if you can't make the audience in your head laugh, it's gonna be a long, lonely life. Now, "snaps & buckles & things" are the links to the small stories that also make me laugh.

Strangest Reader Submission of the Week :: Thanks Reader Tony Clayton for submitting The Cleverlys performing "Gangham Style".

I will sing nothing else all week.

"I don't really go out at all."
- Jack Kerouac

Ventipop #233 :: Kinky Karma, Nordic Noir & The Prison Inside Me

Ventipop #233 :: Kinky Karma, Nordic Noir & The Prison Inside Me

Recommendations

True Crime TV :: 3 Excellent docs To Watch

1) The Staircase :: Streaming on Netflix - Accident or murder? Author Michael Peterson claims to find his wife's bloody body at the bottom of the staircase inside their home. The police arrive and immediately become suspicious. The events of this documentary take place between the years of 2001 and 2018. I couldn't decide the entire time watching this doc whether or not the accused, Michael Peterson, was someone I should feel sorry for or someone I should be scared to death of.

2) Making A Murderer, Season 2 :: Streaming On Netflix - Like everyone else who watched the first season of Making A Murderer, I was pissed off on behalf of the accused. I thought the defense team did a pretty decent job on behalf of Steven Avery, but he was convicted despite their efforts due to a corrupt justice system in the state of Wisconsin. However, after watching an even more infuriating season two of the series, Avery's new attorney, Kathleen Zellner makes it clear just how incompetent Avery'd defense team were and presents a very logical alternative explanation to the crime and those involved in the ongoing coverup.

3) The Jinx :: Streaming on HBO - This is one of the craziest docs you will ever watch. The story delves into the strange history of real estate heir Robert Durst, long suspected in the still-unsolved 1982 disappearance of his wife as well as the subsequent murders of family friend Susan Berman and neighbor Morris Black. It features an extended, revealing interview with Durst himself. He's hard not to watch. The final moments of this doc are guaranteed to leave you sitting there with your mouth agape.


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