Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Pastor Jokingly Offers to Sponsor Congregation’s Cross Tattoos, Now Has to Pay Up

Posted: 20 Mar 2014 04:42 AM PDT

When Pastor Zack Zehnder flippantly offered free tattoos to his congregation, little did he expect people to actually take him up on it. During a recent sermon about acceptance at the Cross Mount Dora church in Mount Dora, Florida, the pastor had said: "If anybody would like to go out and get a tattoo of the logo of the cross that we have for this church we will find money and pay for that." I suppose he didn't realize exactly how popular tattoos are – at least a dozen church members have already inked themselves with the church cross logo.

Jeremie Turner, one of the congregation members who got inked, said: "We definitely took him up on his offer because if he's going to hand out free tattoos, he's got a crowd of people that's going to accept them." When pastor Zack realized what was happening, he graciously stuck to his word and personally paid for the tattoos at Bill Gold's Tattoo Shop. "If I wasn't so dang sarcastic in my sermons, I don't know that we would be here," he said, while overseeing a church member getting inked at the shop. "But we got some crazy people that have said they wanted to do it so I kinda gotta, I made the promise. I kinda gotta back it up."

It's nice to see  pastor Zack standing by his promise, instead of making excuses to try and get out of the deal. He even hopes that the new tattoos will serve as conversation starters and get more people interested in the church. "People's perception of church has probably never been as negative as it is today and so if we can do something to kind of flip that script and interact with them and do something in a unique and creative way, we're going to do that," he said.

cross-tattoo

Chinese Contestants Stand on One Leg for Hours on End to Win Brand New BMW

Posted: 20 Mar 2014 03:17 AM PDT

Wu Deqi is the proud owner of a brand new swanky BMW. Nothing special so far, I know, but that’s because you don’t yet know how he got it. Instead of money, he had to pay for it with a lot of pain. In a promotional contest held last Sunday in the Shapingba District of Southwest China, Wu stood on one leg with one hand touching the coveted car alongside 20 other participants. After a grueling 7 hours and 26 minutes, Wu was the last man standing – automatically winning possession of the 300,000 yuan BMW X1.

Of course, Wu's feat is nowhere near the Guinness World Record for standing on one leg. That distinction belongs to Suresh Joachim, who balanced himself on one foot for a whopping 76 hours and 40 minutes. But you have to hand it to Wu for his extraordinary effort. I mean, I couldn't do it for over 5 minutes even if they offered me two BMWs.

The actual event began on 1 March and attracted hundreds of participants. About 140 people entered into three elimination rounds, and 20 shortlisted candidates made it to the final competition on Sunday. This last round was the toughest; some of the contestants actually dropped to the ground in agony. The competition began at 9:30 am and by 1:30 pm, the going got really tough. That's when the organizers asked participants to stand on tip of their support foot. Flour was spread under each person's foot to make sure they didn't cheat and rest their heels.

BMW-contest

Young Ukrainian Builds Awe-Inspiring Miniature Frigate with 17,000 Coins

Posted: 20 Mar 2014 02:33 AM PDT

This is what I call expensive art! While most artists spend money on art supplies, this Ukrainian man actually used money itself. 29-year-old chef Sergei Nikolayev Knurov fashioned a detailed miniature ship out of a variety of Ukrainian coins. The final piece contains a whopping 17,000 coins, with bank notes for sails.

Sergei, a resident of Mykolaiv city in southern Ukraine, first started the project with coins from his piggy bank. But he soon ran out of material – his personal stash only covered the keel. So he began to exchange paper money for coins whenever possible at drug stores and markets, and sometimes with friends. When people found out what the coins were meant for, they were glad to part with their loose change. The coins Sergei used are mainly 2 and 10 kopecks, and the sails are made of 25 five-hryvnia notes.

At first, it wasn't easy for Sergei to actually create the 3 dimensional model of the ship using just his sketches and notes. But lucky for him, his wife Alena is an amateur numismatist (a person who studies and collects currency). She helped him fuse the coins together using silicate glue, which worked pretty well. Sergei said that using regular super glue could have resulted in oxidization, but this way the metal structure will last longer.

coin-ship

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