Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Eccentric Millionaire Who Hid Gold Treasure in the Rocky Mountains Five Years Ago Says It’s Still Up for Grabs

Posted: 07 May 2015 02:03 AM PDT

If you believe millionaire art collector Forrest Fenn, there's actually a real treasure buried somewhere in the Rocky Mountains, just waiting to be found. The 84-year-old author claims he hid a chest full of gold and jewelry – worth millions of dollars – in the mountains five years ago, and even left clues in his book The Thrill of the Chase. Tens of thousands of people have joined the hunt, but no one has managed to find the coveted treasure so far.

Fenn, a native of New Mexico, moved back to Santa Fe with his wife in 1970. He has always had a strong sense of adventure, but he didn't get the idea to hide his treasure until 1988, when he was diagnosed with kidney cancer. He was told that his chances of survival were slim, so he started thinking of creative ways to share his wealth. That's when he thought of a treasure hunt.

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Artist’s Painted Portraits Look More Like High-Definition Photographs

Posted: 07 May 2015 01:21 AM PDT

Italian artist Marco Grassi paints portraits of women that are so perfect, down to the fine hair lines, pores and freckles on the skin that people often mistake them for photographs.

However, Grassi differentiates himself from other hyper-realist painters by giving his artworks a surreal twist. In one painting, for example, his subject's back is adorned with a tribal motif that seems carved into her back revealing a hollow interior. Other of his ‘surreal hyper-realistic” include a woman with spectacular glowing tattoos that seem to emerge from her skin, or another with a futuristic glass necklace around her neck. Although his human subjects appear photographed, it’s these little impossible details that give them away as paintings.

Marco-Grassi-painting

Controversial Slapping Therapy Leaves Practitioners Covered in Bruises

Posted: 07 May 2015 12:40 AM PDT

A Chinese man is gaining notoriety for trying to cure his patients' illnesses by literally beating it out of them. Former investment banker and self-styled healer Hongchi Xiao apparently believes that by slapping themselves black and blue, they are getting rid of toxins. But his methods have come under scrutiny ever since the death of a seven-year-old boy who attended his slapping workshop in Sydney.

Hongchi, who claims to have learned the ancient practice of 'paida lajin' from a Taoist monk, says that his slaps have cured several medical conditions ranging from diabetes to hypertension. "The slapping and stretching work together to clear the meridians of blocks and help the body get rid of the disease," he explained. Slapping the body, he said, "builds heat, causing blood vessels to expand, and 'chi' to flow strongly. Yang rises, yin melts and long-held toxins and blocks are released."

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