Oddity Central |
- Guy Has Temporary Tattoo Done by 1,000 Bedbugs Feeding at Once
- Kindhearted Artist Turns Trash into Tiny Mobile Homes for the Homeless
- Honorable Man Borrows Money from Neighbors to Save Sick Wife, Spends the Next 24 Years Paying Back Every Penny
Guy Has Temporary Tattoo Done by 1,000 Bedbugs Feeding at Once Posted: 12 May 2014 03:57 AM PDT Don't let the bed bugs bite, is what we've always been told. But Matt Camper, an urban entomologist at Colorado State University, is doing the exact opposite. He's gone and created a unique 'bedbug tattoo gun' – made of a jar, some wire mesh and thousands of hungry bed bugs. You simply invert the jar onto your skin, let the bed bugs bite, and later admire the pink, temporary tattoo they leave behind. Camper's unique invention will be featured on an upcoming edition of 'Outrageous Acts of Science' on the Science Channel. There's a rabbit pattern on the top of the jar, through which the bugs are allowed to access human flesh. According to wildlife expert Ellie Harrison, it takes two hours for the tattoo to really show up on the skin. "Two hours after the bed bugs have fed, the inflammatory response really kicks in and immune cells will flood into the tissues from the blood, producing redness and swelling and heat," she says on the TV show. "Bed bugs feed exclusively on blood," she said. "They find us via two sources. Firstly, they detect our body head, and secondly, they detect our carbon dioxide emissions. And they don't need to be that close, they can be 10 feet away and still find food."
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Kindhearted Artist Turns Trash into Tiny Mobile Homes for the Homeless Posted: 12 May 2014 02:46 AM PDT Gregory Kloehn is an artist who uses his skills for a really worthy cause – building homes for the homeless. Making use of recycled and reclaimed materials found on the street, he creates small mobile homes, each about the size of a sofa. These homes come with pitched roofs to keep out the rain and wheels at the bottom, for mobility. So far, he's built about 10 shelters through the 'Homeless Homes Project', and hopes to create more in the future. Although they're not made of much, the tiny homes are more than enough for someone with no other place to sleep. They are painted in bright colors and have a few quirky elements – like washing machine doors for windows and minivan tops for roofs. Gregory, 43, is a sculptor by profession, but he went on a construction spree after building his five-unit live-work condominium from scratch. Originally from Denver, he now lives in Oakland, California, where he carries out his philanthropic construction project. "Before, I was all about sculpture, but I realized it just sits there," he said. "And you're just peddling it to rich people. I kind of think if you're putting so much effort into something it would be nice if it did something." So with his new-found fascination for architecture, Gregory began to study homeless shanties in his neighborhood. He wrote a book called 'Homeless Architecture' at the time, admiring how they were able to recycle all day and make homes out of almost nothing.
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Posted: 12 May 2014 01:33 AM PDT 24 years ago, when this poor Chinese man's wife got sick, he had no money to pay for her treatment. Mei Guanghan, 66, had no choice back then but to borrow 70,000 yuan ($11,000) from hundreds of neighbors. Since then, he's had just one mission – to repay every neighbor, down to the last penny. And here's the good news – after years of sacrifices and living in poverty, he has managed to achieve his goal. A long time ago, the Gunaghans were quite the happy couple with a 15 year old daughter, but their lives changed forever in 1990. Ren Chun'ai woke up early one morning in April and rode the tractor into town to buy some food. On her way back to the village, she was involved in a horrible accident. "In the mountains, two tractors were traveling in the same direction," she said. "I took a sharp turn, the tires slipped and I fell into the valley." She hit a rock and slipped into a coma soon after. The medical fees required to save her life were huge, so he went from door to door, begging people for whatever cash they could spare. He carried a little brown book with him, carefully noting down the name of each person and the amount they had loaned him. He made a promise to all the donors: "One day I will be back, knocking on your door with your money."
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