Oddity Central |
- Denmark Gives Student $430,000 for Research on Legendary Underground Trolls
- Gravity Glue – Michael Grab’s Gravity Defying Rock Balancing Art
- Australian Batman Fan Spends Two Years Building His Own Batmobile
Denmark Gives Student $430,000 for Research on Legendary Underground Trolls Posted: 07 Nov 2014 06:56 AM PST Denmark's economy might not be in tip-top shape right now, but that hasn't deterred northern country’s government from awarding 2.5 million Danish kroner ($430,000) in grant money to a study that investigates the existence of underground trolls (mythical creatures, not internet haters). The money will be received by Lars Christian Kofoed Rømer, a PhD student and part-time anthropology lecturer at the University of Copenhagen, who has spent two years studying ghost activity. With the new funds, he now plans to research 'actual relationships' between humans and trolls on the Danish island of Bornholm. Bornholm is well-known for its flourishing tourism industry, which is mostly centered around the belief that the island is inhabited by trolls who live underground and come out at night. They even have a 'national troll' named Krølle Brølle, who is 'small and cute' and lives with his troll family on Langebjerg, and comes out at night to have 'many exciting adventures'.
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Gravity Glue – Michael Grab’s Gravity Defying Rock Balancing Art Posted: 07 Nov 2014 06:45 AM PST Artist Michael Grab is a master of rock balancing – he can pile them up in all sorts of gravity-defying formations, and believe it or not, there's no glue involved. Michael calls his art a 'contemplative stone arrangement' that involves 'patience, adaptation, slow-breathing, steady hands and a plethora of other practiced skills'. His project, called 'Gravity Glue', has him balancing rocks of all shapes and capturing the impossible-looking structures on camera.
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Australian Batman Fan Spends Two Years Building His Own Batmobile Posted: 07 Nov 2014 06:23 AM PST While most Batman fans are content with collecting Batmobile action figures, 29-year-old Zac Mihajlovic from Camden, New South Wales, decided to build a real one for himself. He spent the past two years modelling a street legal version of the iconic batman car from the 1989 film starring Michael Keaton. Zac is now the proud owner of Australia's only working and registered replica of the 1989 Batmobile that can be legally driven on public roads. And although he has been offered a lot of money for it (a six figure sum, he says), the Batman fan plans to keep it and use it to make sick children happy. "It's my absolute pride and joy," he remarked. "I feel like if I do nothing else for the rest of my life, I'll die happy." Zac was only five years old when he first watched Batman and his obsession began. "At the time, being a five-year-old kid, it scared me but I never forgot it. I just love Batman because he's one of the only superheroes that don't have powers so being able to connect to him on a human level is great."
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