Oddity Central |
- Pizza Chain Advertises Rabbit Pizza for Easter with Billboards Made of Real Dead Rabbits
- Colombia’s Flintstone House Is Made Entirely from Baked Clay
- Chinese Businessman Tries to Hide Rooftop Villa with Trees and Bushes
Pizza Chain Advertises Rabbit Pizza for Easter with Billboards Made of Real Dead Rabbits Posted: 15 Apr 2014 04:40 AM PDT Eating rabbits isn't a real Easter tradition, but that hasn't stopped Hell Pizza from adding rabbit pizza to their menu this year. And that's not even the strange part of this story. What's really unusual is their marketing strategy. The New Zealand based pizza chain has put up billboards completely covered with real rabbit hides. The posters read: 'New for Easter. Rabbit Pizza. Made from Real Rabbit. Like this Billboard'. If you find that gross, you aren't alone. The restaurant has been receiving severe backlash from locals ever since the billboards went up at multiple locations. But the folks at Hell Pizza are totally unapologetic. They've defended their PR stunt on their Facebook page: "As well as being a delicious meat, and even quite cute, rabbits are unfortunately also a noted pest that is damaging to the New Zealand environment, particularly in the South Island." General manager Ben Cumming called rabbit meat one of the healthiest meats in the world. "Eating rabbit meat isn't just environmentally sustainable – it's actually helping to reduce pests," he said. "It has a beautiful, subtle flavor and is a great match for the other ingredients on the pizza. You get chunks of the smoky rabbit flavor complimented by sweet and slightly spicy beetroot and horopito relish, then bursts of cream cheese and toasted pine nuts which linger on the taste buds afterwards. We think it's going to go down really well."
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Colombia’s Flintstone House Is Made Entirely from Baked Clay Posted: 15 Apr 2014 02:55 AM PDT 64-year-old architect Octavio Mendoza literally baked the house that he lives in. He calls the 5,400 square foot house 'the biggest piece of pottery in the world'. Casa Terracotta, or Casa Barro in Spanish, was built exclusively by hand using clay and baked in the sun. Located in Villa de Leyva, a colonial mountain village in Colombia, it is also known to locals as the 'Casa de Flintstone' or Flintstone House. From the outside, Casa Terracotta looks like a huge mound of clay, loosely fashioned to resemble a cottage. It is surrounded by lush green farmland, set against a breathtaking backdrop of the mountains. Inside, the rooms curve and flow into each other, as though the entire house was cast in a single mold. Rustic as it seems, the clay cottage does offer a few modern conveniences – solar panels for hot water, toilets and sinks covered in colorful mosaic tiles, two floors with lounge and sleeping areas, and a fully functional kitchen. Of course, the kitchen table and all the utensils are all fashioned out of the same material – clay. The beer mugs that adorn the kitchen are made of recycled glass and the lighting fixtures from scrap metal. Mendoza, who spent most of his career designing homes, commercial buildings and churches, calls the clay house his 'project for life'. He started to work on it over 14 years ago – his goal was to demonstrate how soil can be transformed into habitable architecture by simply using the natural resources at hand. So Casa Terracotta doesn't contain an ounce of cement or steel. Mendoza, who is also an environmental activist, said: "Think of it this way. In desert places (which exist all across the planet), soil is perfect for this type of architecture. This means that for all those regions, a system like this could bring housing to millions of families."
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Chinese Businessman Tries to Hide Rooftop Villa with Trees and Bushes Posted: 15 Apr 2014 01:16 AM PDT When this wealthy Chinese businessman purchased an 18th floor penthouse apartment in Guangzhou city several years ago, he appeared quite contented with it. But soon, he began to make changes that the neighbors thought were weird. At first, he planted all kinds of huge trees and thick bushes on the roof, which neighbors assumed were meant to protect his privacy. But then he took it one step further, by surrounding the property with camouflage nets filled with plant foliage, which was very unusual. That's when the neighbors began to worry for his sanity, but it turns out the businessman wasn't insane at all. He was actually using all the camouflage as a cover up for the additional two floors that he was secretly adding to his apartment. While he told everybody that he renovating, he was actually adding a 19th and 20th floor to his already massive apartment. And he did this in secret to work around the local planning laws.
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