Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Struggling Korean Baseball Team Replaces Fans with Cheering Robots

Posted: 11 Aug 2014 03:54 AM PDT

A struggling South Korean Major League baseball team has come up with a novel idea to boost players' morale. They're replacing human fans with robots called 'Fanbots', all in a bid to improve the atmosphere at their matches.

The promo video for 'Fanbot – the world's first cheering robot' rides high on the emotions involved while watching a match. "Fans of Hanwha Eagles always come to the stadium to cheer for the team," the video states. "But those who cannot come to the stadium watch the game on the web or on their phones and cheer through commenting online. What if there was a robot cheering for those fans?"

It's not easy being a fan of the Hanwha Eagles – most fans are subject to ridicule because of the team's poor performance. The Hanwha Eagles have suffered over 400 losses in the past five years. Fans of the team are regarded with sympathy – they've even been dubbed 'Buddhist Saints' and 'Hanwha Chickens' by fans of other teams. The humiliation has been so great that many fans don’t feel like attending games anymore. Others simply do not have the time.

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The Photo-Like Paintings of Hyung Jin Park

Posted: 11 Aug 2014 02:29 AM PDT

Korean artist Hyung Jin Park uses photographs as inspiration to create equally realistic paintings of young Asian women. He generally paints bust-length portraits of a monumental scale, up to seven feet high, depicting women at close range. The hair, lips, eyes and skin are painted with a high level of precision, making them unbelievably real. His photorealistic technique is so accurate that once he completes a piece, it's almost impossible to tell if it’s a high-resolution photograph or a painting.

But Park's work can be identified if you are aware of his signature style. He often makes distortions of the women he's painting, like enlarging the eyes or shrinking the chin, to give them an otherworldly look. He also gives the women a universalized, glazed appearance, softening features just like in Oriental ceramics. So his paintings do appear to be like photographs, but they're also rather surreal. And although the artist chooses his subjects from among his students, the women in his paintings are really quite different from the real-life inspiration.

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What Is It with Wealthy Indian Men and Solid Gold Shirts?

Posted: 11 Aug 2014 01:07 AM PDT

When we wrote about Datta Phuge, an Indian businessman who owns a 3.2-kilogram solid gold shirt, we thought that his was a unique story. But it turns out there are other rich men in India obsessed with gold – like Pankaj Parakh, a businessman and local politician who celebrated his 45th birthday by gifting himself a 4-kilogram gold shirt worth over $200,000.

Pankaj is a textile magnate from the town of Yeola, near Mumbai city, who made his millions through his clothing empire. He now wants to make sure the rest of the world knows about his success. And what better way to flash his wealth than by wearing it? So he commissioned the solid gold shirt that he wore on the occasion of his birthday, last Friday.

The yellow metal shirt was designed by Bafna Jewellers in the nearby city of Nashik. The garment was then meticulously executed at Shanti Jewellers in Mumbai, by a team of 20 select artisans who spent 3,200 hours over the past two months 'sewing' the shirt.

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