Oddity Central |
- Man Goes on Hunger Strike for the Right to Post Anything Online Without Getting Fired
- This Japanese Water Cake Looks and Tastes Unlike Any Sweet You’ve Tried Before
- Japanese Artist Carves Realistic-Looking Lobster Out of Boxwood
Man Goes on Hunger Strike for the Right to Post Anything Online Without Getting Fired Posted: 06 Jun 2014 03:28 AM PDT It’s quite common these days for employees to get fired over their social media activity. Despite privacy settings, it's amazing how many people manage to lose their jobs over ridiculous things they post online. And it's not just about losing a job, it's about getting one too – prospective employers just won't consider candidates without scrutinizing their online profiles first. Well, the job market sure is tough, but there do exist a few kind souls who believe that our social lives and professional lives should be kept separate by law. Like Brian Zulberti, a Delaware lawyer who is currently on a hunger strike to raise awareness about this issue. He's actually posted a number of naked photos of himself online, in the past, and he wants the right to keep doing things like that it without it affecting his professional career. "This is about privacy and the advancement of technology," said Zulberti. "Soon it will be the total informative age, privacy out the window. The best we can do is adapt the law to the future now so we don't turn into 1984, George Orwell style."
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This Japanese Water Cake Looks and Tastes Unlike Any Sweet You’ve Tried Before Posted: 06 Jun 2014 01:59 AM PDT It looks like a large drop of water, but it's actually a cake. This Japanese invention is as delicate as it looks and sounds, but it needs to be consumed in only 30 minutes, after which it will simply turn into a sweet puddle of water. The water cake looks like a large bowl of jelly without the color, but its makers insist that it's cake. The strange dish is a variation of the well-known Japanese rice-cake confection, shingen mochi. Mochis are trademarked desserts, only created by the Kinseiken Seika Company. A regular type of shingen mochi is made from a particularly soft type of mochi rice cake, sprinkled with kinako soybean powder and eaten with brown sugar syrup. Traditionally, it is yellow in color, with a sticky and soft jelly-like consistency.
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Japanese Artist Carves Realistic-Looking Lobster Out of Boxwood Posted: 06 Jun 2014 12:39 AM PDT 25-year-old Ryosuke Ohtake is a master craftsman who recently tried his hand at 'jizai okimono' – the Japanese art of carving realistic wooden animals, complete with movable joints. He created a near-perfect lobster entirely out of boxwood. The sculpture is so life-like that when lifted, its claws, legs and tail move in the exact same way that a real, live lobster would. A three-minute video clip that shows Ohtake working on the lobster with his various sculpting tools and blocks of wood, has become very popular online. In the video, he lifts the finished sculpture in his hands and shows exactly how each part moves. The details are simply mind-blowing.
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