Oddity Central |
- Former Millionaire Now in Heavy Debt after Adopting 72 Children in the Last 19 Years
- Game of Drones – Australia’s Awesome Underground Drone Racing League
- Guy Living Near Milwaukee Airport Paints “Welcome to Cleveland” on His Roof to Confuse Airplane Passengers
Former Millionaire Now in Heavy Debt after Adopting 72 Children in the Last 19 Years Posted: 17 Jun 2015 01:31 AM PDT Meet Li Li Juan, a former millionaire whose benevolent spirit led her to bankruptcy. The 47-year-old, from northern China's Hebei Province, has adopted 72 abandoned children over the course of 19 years. She spent all her money caring for them, and is now facing a huge debt of over two million yuan. Li became rich during the 1980s, earning huge profits from her garments business and her investments in iron ore mining. It was around this time that she started taking in sick and disabled children who were abandoned by their parents, and orphaned children whose parents had died in coal mine disasters. She used her two sources of income to provide for all her adopted children. It was all smooth sailing for a few years, but as luck would have it, hard times fell upon Li in 2008. Her mine was shut down due to urban developments, cutting down a major source of her income. But she continued to care for the children by selling off all her properties and valuables, one at a time.
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Game of Drones – Australia’s Awesome Underground Drone Racing League Posted: 17 Jun 2015 12:21 AM PDT Drone racing is a mushrooming trend in Australia, catering to a growing band of enthusiasts looking to fulfill their need for speed. The races, organised by underground 'leagues', generally take place in rundown warehouses, farms, and go-kart tracks in the fringe suburbs of various cities. The relatively unknown sport is called FPV (first person racing). Participants spend countless hours custom building their quadcopters, fitting them with onboard cameras and 'blinging' them up with LED lights. During the actual events, racers don special goggles – sometimes held together with gaffer tape – to give them a drone's-eye view as they steer their machines around the course. So it's a lot like video gaming, except players get to control a real device instead of a virtual one. "It's addictive. It's like playing a video game," says drone racer Darren French, who has clocked over 60 kmph. "It's fast. The more you do it, the more you want to fly." |
Posted: 16 Jun 2015 11:33 PM PDT For nearly four decades, Mark Gubin has been playing an epic prank on people flying into his hometown. As aircrafts descend into Milwaukee's Mitchell International airport, passengers are greeted with a warm, welcoming sign: 'Welcome to Cleveland'! Gubin says that the sign – painted on the roof of his apartment in six-foot letters – has always succeeded at giving flyers a good scare. "There's no real purpose for having this here except madness," he told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in 2005. "Which I tend to be pretty good at." The retired photographer revealed that he first got the idea for the sign from his assistant, when he was having lunch with her up on his roof in 1978. She had noticed all the low-flying planes in the area, and told him it would be nice to make a sign to welcome people to Milwaukee. But then Gubin came up with an even better idea – a sign welcoming them to the wrong city. |
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