This Year’s Puppy Bowl Will Feature Three Dogs With Disabilities

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Forget football—dog lovers know that Sunday, February 5, is all about the Puppy Bowl. For the uninitiated, the annual television event airs on Animal Planet on the day of the Super Bowl, and features dozens of adorable shelter dogs tussling and tearing their way through a model stadium. This year, USA Today reports, the show’s producers were looking to add a little diversity to the mix, and recruited three canines with disabilities to compete on the field.

Lucky is a rangy, dark-furred Terrier mix with an amputated leg. Doobert, an English Pointer, is hearing-impaired, so caretakers trained him to understand hand signals on the turf. And Winston is a fluffy Australian Shepherd with both vision and hearing impairments. He requires special monitoring, but officials say he relies on his keen sense of smell.

In total, 78 puppies—including Lucky, Doobert, and Winston—participated in this year’s Puppy Bowl, which was filmed in October. According to USA Today, the game features the largest representation of canines with disabilities to ever “compete” in the event.

This year’s lineup of pups came from 34 rescue organizations from across the U.S., and all of them were in need of forever homes. Several of them have already been adopted.

Dogs with disabilities are “just like any other dogs—they just have certain aspects of them that are special,” Tiffany Gaylon, founder of the Tennessee-based nonprofit Operation Education Animal Rescue and Lucky’s Puppy Bowl caretaker, told USA Today.

Animal Planet’s 13th annual Puppy Bowl airs on February 5 at 3 p.m. ET. Watch a sneak peek of the action below, courtesy of Buzz60. To get a glimpse of the full lineup, visit Animal Planet’s website.

[h/t USA Today]


January 5, 2017 – 12:45pm

Unlock the Time-Saving Power of Your Keyboard’s Function Keys

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See those keys at the top of your computer keyboard, labeled with letters and numbers ranging from F1 to F12? Unless you’re a computer whiz, there’s a good chance you rarely—if ever—use them, let alone know why they’re there in the first place.

For the uninitiated, these seldom-touched keys are called function keys, and they can help you perform basic computer tasks with a single touch of a finger. Get familiar with their many functions by checking out the infographic below, created by the folks over at Bright Side.

[h/t Shareably.net]


January 5, 2017 – 3:00am

From Test Tube to Tavern: London Craft Brewery Uses DNA Testing to Create Bespoke Beer

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If you’re willing to shell out nearly $31,000 for a bespoke brew, The Drinks Business reports that Meantime Brewing Company, a London-based craft beer company, is now offering customers the chance to create a beer that appeals specifically to their individual flavor profiles by using DNA testing.

Meantime Brewing Company has joined forces with genetics company 23andMe to make custom beverages, which they’re advertising as “the world’s most personalized beer.” Dubbed “Meantime Bespoke,” the service begins with 23andMe’s scientists, who test beer lovers’ saliva samples for hereditary variations in oral taste receptors (which involves a taste gene called TAS2R38). This helps identify genetic variants that may determine whether drinkers are disposed toward certain flavor profiles—think sweetness or bitterness—in beer. (This is reportedly determined in part based on customers’ sensitivity to a bitter compound called 6-n-propylthiouracil.)

Once your genetic makeup is analyzed, Meantime’s brewers will use the scientists’ findings to guide the brewing process. You’ll consult with a brewmaster to contribute feedback, and ensure that the final product is exactly suited to your liking. If you want, you can even partake in the fun by adding hops and grain to the mix and testing it. (To ensure your skills are up to snuff, your commissioning cost also pays for a beer-making course called “The Knowledge.”)

After the brewing process is complete, customers are supplied with more than 2000 pints of customized beer. For an additional fee, they can personalize the packaging design, purchase custom glassware, or have their personalized brew poured in Meantime’s tasting rooms and have kegs sent to their local bar.

So far, there are no testimonials from customers on whether Meantime Bespoke’s science-inspired venture really produces the perfect pint. But according to Meantime, their head brewer, Ciaran Giblin, recently became the world’s first person to create his own beer inspired by his DNA flavor profile. He prefers bitter tastes, so he ended up with a hoppy Double IPA.

[h/t The Drinks Business]


January 4, 2017 – 7:00pm

‘Star Trek’ Fan Builds Klingon Warship Entirely From LEGO Bricks

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Proving that nerdy interests don’t need to be mutually exclusive, io9 reports that a German man named Kevin J. Walter has built a miniature version of the Klingon Bird-of-Prey ship from the Star Trek saga, entirely from LEGO bricks.

Walter told io9 that the project is his way of paying tribute to the TV show’s recent 50th anniversary. From conception to finished product, the model took him around eight years to complete, including a year and a half or so to construct the final version.

The space ship’s model is based on a virtual design, which the LEGO hobbyist tweaked from 2008 and 2010. As for its individual sections, the ship is built from a variety of LEGO parts that Walter ordered from BrickLink—some of which he repurposed in creative ways. (Example: Walter used Bilbo Baggins’s front door to make the ship’s guns.)

Initially, Walter wanted to make the wings moveable, but they proved to be too heavy and frail during the later stages of construction, CBR.com reports. Walter’s mock-up also called for more than 250,000 plastic bricks, but he ended up only using around 25,000. In its final state (including the stand), the ship is a little over two feet long, and ranges in width from 16 inches to nearly three feet.

Check out a photo below, or visit Walter’s Flickr page to view more images. And keep your eyes peeled for yet another LEGO project, courtesy of Walter: a 150,000-piece LEGO model of Barad-dûr, or “The Dark Tower,” from The Lord of the Rings franchise. It’s been in the works for more than six years, and Walter hopes to complete it by the end of the year, just in time for The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers‘s 15th anniversary in December.

[h/t io9]


January 4, 2017 – 3:00am

This Website Lets You Watch Every Single ‘Stare’ Scene from ‘The Office’

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YouTube

A facial expression is often worth a thousand words—especially on NBC’s The Office. Characters are prone to breaking the fourth wall by staring directly into the camera, their smiles, grimaces, and stares providing viewers with a glimpse inside their heads. By the time the show’s final episode aired in 2013, audiences could instantly recognize—and interpret—Jim Halpert’s ironic stare, Dwight Schrute’s self-satisfied smirk, and Michael Scott’s awkward fake smile.

For fans looking to relive these quietly hilarious scenes, Nerdist reports that a website, The Office Stare Machine, has compiled “every single time a character speechlessly breaks the 4th wall and stares at the camera.” Creator Joe Sabia spent a year and a half building an archive of more than 700 clips, and teamed up with developer Aaron Rasmussen to display them online. The site features a search engine, which allows visitors to type in more than 800 different emotions—boredom, sadness, anger, and loneliness, to name a few—and watch a corresponding video snippet.

Aside from its laugh factor, The Office Stare Machine provides viewers with a unique way of getting to know their favorite characters’ personalities. According to the site’s creators, Michael Scott, as played by Steve Carell, has the most “happy” expressions, whereas Dwight Schrute, a.k.a. Rainn Wilson, has the most devious ones. And despite his fun-loving, easygoing nature, Jim, who’s played by John Krasinski, is sad the most—presumably because of his long-running struggle to win secretary Pam Beesly’s affections.

Check out a few clips from The Office Stare Machine below, or visit the site to view the full archive. If you need an extra incentive to watch the entire collection, the website is also designed to play “a secret, epic, and beautifully crafted surprise video” once you’re done browsing its catalog of emotions.

LONELY

TIRED

ANNOYED

HAPPY

[h/t Nerdist]


January 3, 2017 – 4:30pm

5 Theories About Amelia Earhart’s Disappearance

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In 1937, celebrated aviator Amelia Earhart embarked on her second attempt to circumnavigate the globe—and on July 2, she and navigator Fred Noonan vanished while flying over the Pacific Ocean, en route to a largely uninhabited coral atoll called Howland Island. To this day, Earhart’s fate remains a mystery. But over the years, experts and conspiracy theorists alike have come up with numerous theories to explain her disappearance. Here’s a small sampling of them.

1. EARHART’S PLANE CRASHED AND SANK INTO THE PACIFIC OCEAN.

Many experts believe that Earhart’s Lockheed Model 10 Electra never arrived on Howland Island because it ran out of gas, crashed, and sank in the Pacific Ocean.

The aviator’s world flight began in Oakland, California, on May 21, 1937, and on June 29, she and Noonan reached Lae, New Guinea. A few days later, the duo embarked on the journey’s third-to-last leg: a 2556-mile nonstop flight to Howland Island, a tiny coral atoll in the South Pacific. There, they planned to refuel before traveling to Hawaii, and then California.

At 6:14 a.m. on July 2, Earhart and Noonan’s plane made radio contact with U.S. Coast Guard cutter Itasca, which sat off the coast of Howland to provide Earhart with radio navigation, communication support, and a smoke plume. Earhart reported that they were only 200 miles away—but around 7:42 a.m., she contacted the Itasca again to say they were running low on fuel and couldn’t spot land.

Communication was spotty, and Earhart couldn’t hear most of the Itasca’s replies. The plane radioed the ship several more times—the last time at 8:43 a.m—before losing all contact. Earhart’s last, garbled message is thought to have said, “We are on the line 157-337… We are running on line north and south.”

Today, many parties—including the U.S. government and experts at the Smithsonian Institution’s Air & Space Museum—say that the plane likely ran out of gas and plunged into the ocean, killing both Earhart and Noonan.

Earhart and Noonan were officially declared lost at sea on July 19, 1937, following a widespread sea and air search involving 4000 crewmen, nine vessels, and 66 aircraft. In recent years, Nauticos—a company in Hanover, Maryland that performs deep-ocean searches—has looked for Earhart’s plane, but their efforts have yielded no findings.

2. EARHART WAS A SECRET SPY WHO SURVIVED THE VOYAGE AND LIVED HER FINAL YEARS IN HIDING.

In his 2016 book Amelia Earhart: Beyond the Grave, author W.C. Jameson builds on one theory that Earhart wasn’t simply a pilot: She was also a spy, hired by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to monitor Japanese military installations on the Marshall Islands.

According to Jameson, Earhart’s plane was outfitted with cameras. However, the pilot’s surveillance mission didn’t go as planned: She was shot down by the Japanese, or captured in the Marshall Islands after she crashed or made a forced landing.

As the story goes, Earhart was reportedly held captive for years, but Roosevelt stayed mum on her whereabouts, not wanting the public to know he had hired the world’s most famous female aviator to monitor the enemy. Meanwhile, officials altered Coast Guard logbooks to say her plane disappeared. (Jameson says he interviewed a former U.S. Army official’s nephew, who said it was known among select, high-ranking parties that Earhart was part of a spy mission.)

According to the theory, Earhart was liberated in 1945, and she returned to the U.S., changed her name to Irene Craigmile Bolam, and lived undercover as a banker in New Jersey. In 1982, Bolam—a.k.a. Earhart—died.

Variations of this theory are posited in several other books, including Amelia Earhart Lives (1970), written by author Joe Klaas with the help of Joseph Gervais, a former Air Force major. Gervais met Bolam while meeting with a group of aviation enthusiasts, and became convinced that she looked just like the missing pilot. After investigating Bolam’s life, Gervais claimed in Klass’s book that few public records existed to support her accepted identity, and that she was, in fact, Earhart in hiding.

This theory was widely debunked, and Bolam called it a “poorly documented hoax.” She filed a $1.5 million lawsuit, and the book’s publisher, McGraw-Hill, pulled the book off the market. The case was reportedly settled out of court. As for the so-called “resemblance” between Bolam and Earhart, people who have compared photos of the two (including a criminal forensic expert hired by National Geographic) say they aren’t the same person.

3. EARHART WAS CAPTURED BY THE JAPANESE, AND SHE DIED AS A PRISONER.

Some people say that Japanese forces apprehended Earhart and Noonan—perhaps as spies, or simply as stranded crew members—either on the island of Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands or in the Marshall Islands. They eventually died in captivity.

Several books propose variations of this theory, including Fred Goerner’s The Search for Amelia Earhart (1966). Goerner posits that that Earhart and Noonan crash-landed on Mili Atoll in the Marshall Islands. Natives are said to have seen Earhart’s aircraft land, and to have helped the Japanese remove it and ship it to Saipan, nearly 2000 miles away. As for Earhart and Noonan, they were captured alive and sent to Saipan, where they died as prisoners.

In 2009, Wally Earhart, Amelia Earhart’s fourth cousin, corroborated these claims. According to him, his relative succumbed to dysentery, and Noonan was beheaded by the Japanese. (Wally Earhart declined to name his sources, so this premise is hearsay until proven otherwise.)

Recently, Parker Hannafin Corporation, a motion control technologies company, funded search efforts in the Marshall Islands, where search and salvage nonprofit Amelia Research, Inc. had found pieces of metal believed to have come from Earhart’s plane following its crash. The results of the expedition haven’t been announced.

4. EARHART DIED AS A CASTAWAY.

Some people believe that Earhart and Noonan, unable to locate Howland Island, searched for another island to land on. The duo ended up making it to Nikumaroro (also known as Gardner Island) in the Pacific republic of Kiribati, which lies some 350 miles southeast of Howland. There, they radioed distress calls for days until their plane was swept away by the tide. Earhart (and presumably Noonan) both died as castaways.

The leading proponents of this theory are the members of a nonprofit group called the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR). Led by executive director Richard Gillespie, they’ve spent decades investigating Earhart’s last flight, and have traveled to Nikumaroro Island multiple times since 1989. Their expeditions have uncovered artifacts including leather shoe parts, fragments of a jar that may have been freckle cream (Earhart had freckles), and Plexiglas and aluminum fragments.

Recently, TIGHAR made headlines when they announced that a new analysis of bones discovered on Nikumaroro in either 1939 or 1940 may support their castaway explanation. The 13 bones—including a skull, a humerus, and a radius—were found along with the sole of a woman’s shoe, an empty box that may have once held a sextant, and other debris. Long ago, a doctor named D.W. Hoodless determined that they belonged to an elderly man, and over the decades, the partial human skeleton was discarded. But in 1998, TIGHAR re-examined the bones’ recorded measurements, and claimed that Hoodless was wrong: They actually belonged to a woman with the same stature and ethnicity as Earhart.

In the latest round of speculation, a forensic imaging specialist named Jeff Glickman analyzed photos and the original skeleton measurements and noted that the skeleton’s forearms were particularly long, just like the missing pilot’s. However, many experts have dismissed these new conclusions, saying they—along with TIGHAR’s other theories—aren’t strong enough to confirm Earhart’s fate.

Dorothy Cochrane, a curator at Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, even told Smithsonian magazine that “Gillespie’s theory is based on conjecture and circumstance. He repeatedly ignores facts such as the found sole of a woman’s shoe being the wrong size for Earhart—a fact stated by her sister.” Even the identification of the skeleton as female is in doubt. In 2015, a different set of researchers noted flaws in the 1998 paper and came to the conclusion that the original male classification was more likely.

5. EARHART’S PLANE CRASHED IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA.

In 1945, a group of Australian World War II soldiers on the island of New Britain, in Papua New Guinea, reportedly discovered civilian aircraft wreckage in the jungle [PDF]. A reconnaissance patrol map from that mission names the plane’s construction number—C/N 1055—which matches the one on Earhart’s own aircraft. Its engines also resembled the ones on Earhart’s Lockheed Electra.

David Billings, an Australian aircraft engineer who lives in Papua New Guinea, reportedly owns video testimonies of the discoverers, and to this day, a patrol member’s widow safeguards the map. That being said, Earhart was supposed to land on Howland—not New Britain—so Billings theorizes that she may have turned around while en route to Howland and flown hundreds miles to find another island. However, many people say it’s unlikely, as this theory contradicts Earhart’s final radio messages. Plus, they argue, her plane was too low on fuel to make the journey.

These arguments haven’t stopped Billings and other believers from trying to prove their theory: In 2012, they launched a crowdfunding campaign to fund an expedition to search New Britain’s jungles for the downed aircraft, but it didn’t meet its goal amount.

Additional Sources: Amelia Earhart: Beyond the Grave


January 2, 2017 – 6:00am

28 Rockin’ Facts About The Beatles

filed under: video

The Beatles are one of history’s most influential rock bands, but unless you’re a music history buff, there’s a chance you don’t know a ton about the Fab Four. In the video above, mental_floss List Show host John Green doles out 28 obscure facts about the careers and lives of Ringo, Paul, George, and John. Find out whether or not the “the” in “The Beatles” is supposed to be capitalized, which concert two band members’ future wives both attended, what the puzzling lyrics sung in “I Am The Walrus” really mean, and more. (Just don’t be offended by how many times Green compares them to One Direction.)

Banner image: Getty Images


December 25, 2016 – 12:00am

27 Amazing Accomplishments of People Over 80

filed under: video

For some people, youth is just a warm-up. In the video above, mental_floss List Show host John Green names 27 amazing accomplishments of people over the age of 80, both historic and current. Ranging from athletes and artists to scholars, politicians, and postmen, they’re proof that you’re never too old to achieve big things—even if it’s simply going on a water skiing trip to Mexico to celebrate your 100th birthday.

Banner image: iStock


December 24, 2016 – 12:00am

7 Christmas Foods of Yesteryear

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Over the centuries, yuletide revelers have enjoyed far different culinary fare than we do today. Here are seven Christmas dishes of yesteryear that are sure to confuse—or tantalize—your taste buds.

1. PEACOCK

 
During the Medieval ages, some wealthy Europeans dined on peacock at Christmas dinner. The colorful, plumed bird was often baked into a pie, or roasted with its head and tail still intact. Adding to the flamboyant display, the peacock’s feathers were reattached (or the skinned bird was placed back inside its intact skin), and its tail feathers were fully fanned out.

Peacocks likely looked impressive on a banquet table, but the meat reportedly tasted terrible. “It was tough and coarse, and was criticized by physicians for being difficult to digest and for generating bad humors,” author Melitta Weiss Adamson writes in her book Food in Medieval Times. “To make the meat more easily digestible, it was recommended to hang the slaughtered bird overnight by its neck and weigh down the legs with stones.”

In addition to peacock, swans and geese were also on the Christmas menu. But by the 1520s, another roast delicacy—turkey—had been introduced to Great Britain. Explorer William Strickland is credited with bringing the turkey from the New World to England, and King Henry VIII was reportedly one of the first people to enjoy the new bird for Christmas dinner. Edward VII is said to have made the meal trendy.

2. BOAR’S HEAD

An illustration by St. J. Gilbert of a man holding a boar’s head on a platter that was published in a Christmas supplement to the Illustrated London News in 1855. Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

 
In Medieval and Tudor England, wealthy parties celebrated Christmas by feasting on boar’s head. The boar’s head “formed the centrepiece of the Christmas Day meal,” writes Alison Sim, author of Food and Feast in Tudor England (as quoted by the Food Timeline). “It was garnished with rosemary and bay and evidently was presented to the diners with some style, as told by the many boar’s head carols which still exist.”

One English Christmas carol, dating back to the 15th century, is actually called the “Boar’s Head Carol.” Its lyrics include lines like “The boar’s head, as I understand/Is the rarest dish in all this land/Which thus bedecked with a gay garland/Let us servire cantico (serve with a song).” You can listen to a version here.

3. OYSTER STEW

iStock

 
Today, oysters are a delicacy, but for early Americans who settled along the East Coast, they were a plentiful and nutritious food source. People enjoyed them in stuffing, roasts, and chowder—and 19th-century Irish-American immigrants used them to make a traditional Christmas Eve stew.

Most of these Irish transplants were Catholic, and their religious traditions required them to skip the meat on Christmas Eve. Instead, they enjoyed a soup made from dried ling cod—a common fish back in the Old Country—milk, butter, and pepper. But since Irish Americans couldn’t find dried ling cod in America, they substituted it with fresh, canned, pickled, or dried oysters.

4. MINCEMEAT PIES

iStock

 
Historians trace mincemeat pie (also called mince pie) back to the 11th century, when Crusaders returned from faraway lands with spices. These spices worked as a preservative, so they were baked into pies containing finely chopped meat, dried fruits, and other ingredients.

Mincemeat pies eventually became associated with Christmas. Bakers added three spices to their pies—cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg—to represent the three gifts the Magi gave the baby Jesus. The pies were also baked into the shape of Jesus’s manger, and a model of the Christ Child was placed on top. People believed that eating a mincemeat pie on each of the 12 Days of Christmas (December 25 to January 6) would bring them good luck.

Over the centuries, the pies grew smaller and rounder, and their filling became less meat heavy, containing ingredients including suet, spices, and dried and brandied fruit. Today, some people still eat mincemeat pie in England—and on December 15 some British scientists fired a meat pie into space—but it’s not commonly seen on Christmas dinner tables in the U.S.

5. SUGARPLUMS

Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

 
As a child, you might have been inspired by one of ballet’s most famous movements—The Nutcracker‘s “Dance Of The Sugarplum Fairy”—to wonder what a “sugarplum” actually is. The answer? A hard candy.

Between the 17th and 19th centuries, the term sugarplum was interchangeable with the words dragee or comfit. All referred to a hard, sugary layered candy. Often, the candy contained caraway, cardamom, fennel, ginger, cinnamon, walnut, aniseed, and almond cores. It took time, skill, and special equipment to make these sweets, so they were originally quite expensive and eaten only by wealthy people. Later, innovations in manufacturing made both sugarplums and other candies cheaper, and available for consumption by the masses.

In addition to getting a shout-out in The Nutcracker, sugarplums are also famously mentioned in Clement Clark Moore’s anonymously published 1823 poem “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” better known as “Twas the Night Before Christmas” after its first line. But today, you’re far less likely to see the candies mentioned in a ballet or poem; according to the Oxford English Dictionary, sugarplum is now obsolete.

6. POSSET

Long ago, the English enjoyed a predecessor to eggnog called posset, a kind of “wine custard” made from hot milk curdled with hot ale, wine, or sherry, and mixed with sugar and spices. The drink remained common from the Middle Ages until the early 19th century; over time, it disappeared from the culinary landscape.

Throughout the centuries, winter revelers enjoyed variations on the recipe, and eggs were eventually added to the mix. But since milk, eggs, and liquors like sherry and Madeira wine were either expensive or hard to come by, the drink’s popularity dwindled among the masses. Meanwhile, in America, early settlers created their own version of posset, which we today know as eggnog.

In the video above, you can watch Jonathan Townsend, host of YouTube living history channel Jas. Townsend and Son, cook his own version of posset, as adapted from an 18th-century cookbook. His posset has breadcrumbs.

7. ANIMAL CRACKERS

Ever wondered why boxes of Barnum’s Animal Crackers have a string attached to them? In 1902, the National Biscuit Company (today known as Nabisco) introduced the circus-themed boxes filled with animal-shaped cookies as a seasonal promotion. Since people often adorned their Christmas trees with candy and/or treats, Barnum’s festive containers were hung on branches as decorations.


December 23, 2016 – 8:00pm

11 Brilliant Gifts for the Audiophile in Your Life

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No two music lovers’ tastes are exactly alike, but these holiday gift ideas for audiophiles are sure to please everyone from Beethoven fans to Bowie addicts.

1. SONY SRSXB3 PORTABLE WIRELESS SPEAKER WITH BLUETOOTH; $98

The Sony SRS-XB3 is a portable Bluetooth speaker with long battery life (up to 24 hours) and a water-resistant exterior, but its real selling point is its sound quality: Last spring, PC Magazine named it “one of the best-sounding portable Bluetooth speakers we’ve heard for less than $200.”

Find It: Amazon

2. MIXTAPE GLASSES—SET OF SIX; $50

The audio cassette design on this six-piece glassware set pays homage to retro mixtapes, and also offers a practical use for party hosts: Guests can write their names on the cups on the tapes’ blank labels with a wax pencil, allowing them to keep track of their beverage. Once they leave, the host can wipe the pencil markings off the cup with a dry towel.

Find It: Uncommon Goods

3.1MORE TRIPLE DRIVER IN-EAR HEADPHONES; $85

1MORE’s Triple Driver In-Ear Headphones are proof that high quality often comes in small packages. Tuned by Luca Bignardi, a Latin Grammy Award-winning sound engineer, they boast two balanced armatures and a separate dynamic driver for a sharp, crystal-clear listening experience. For comfort and convenience, the headphones also come with nine sets of different-sized ear tips and a sleek carrying case.

Find It: Amazon

4. RECORD CLOCK; $38

Philadelphia-based artist Jeff Davis gives old records a new life by converting them into wall clocks. Select a music type—rock, jazz, soul, or ‘80s—and he’ll use vintage vinyl from that genre to craft a timepiece.

Find It: Uncommon Goods

5. VINYLMNKY—SUBSCRIPTION; $30 PER MONTH


Vinyl records can be difficult to track down, so subscription service Vinylmnky does the hard work for your favorite music lover by sending them a monthly, pre-selected LP debut recorded by an emerging artist. They’ll also receive info about the album, along with an assortment of artist-curated goodies. Gift membership options include one-month, six-month, and 12-month subscriptions.

Find It: Vinylmnky

6. SEEDLING DESIGN YOUR HEADPHONES, STREET ART KIT; $30

Audophiles with an artistic bent can decorate these plain white headphones with graffiti-inspired designs using stencils, paints, and markers.

Find It: Amazon

7. GOOGLE CHROMECAST AUDIO; $25


Chromecast Audio is a tiny, Wi-Fi-enabled gadget that plugs into a speaker, allowing listeners to stream tunes from a smartphone, tablet, or laptop from anywhere in the house. It’s compatible with most major music services, including Pandora, Google Play Music, Spotify, and iHeartRadio.

Find It: Google

8. UE ROLL; $90

Perfect for their next poolside getaway: This small, wireless Bluetooth speaker has a waterproof shell that allows it to get wet for 30 minutes, or to be submerged in up to three feet of water. Adding to its versatility, it comes with an integrated bungee cord and an inflatable life preserver.

Find It: Amazon

9. MASON JAR SPEAKER & AMPLIFIER; $65

Mason jars aren’t just used for canning anymore. The trendy glass containers are endlessly versatile; here, they’re converted into mini-speakers/amplifiers that connect to a music player (including a smartphone), or an electronic instrument. The re-purposed jars are small enough to toss into a purse or bag, but loud enough to fill a room with sound.

Find It: Uncommon Goods

10. SATECHI ALUMINUM USB HEADPHONE STAND HOLDER; $35

Did you favorite audiophile recently splurge on a great set of headphones? Help them show off their gear (and store it neatly) with this sleek aluminum headphone stand holder. A rubberized grip holds the headset firmly in place, and a cable organizer tucked behind the stand’s arm keeps unruly cords at bay. And at the stand’s base, you’ll find three USB ports for data transfer, along with a 3.5mm port for plugging in headphones. The stand shown here is gray, but for a touch of glitz, you can also order it in gold, silver, or rose gold.

Find It: Amazon

11. CROSLEY C200 TURNTABLE; $197

A sound investment: Music lovers continue to prize vinyl albums for their superior sound quality. This retro-inspired turntable by Crosley Radio looks a lot like your dad’s old record player, but it packs a modern punch. The Crosley C200 can play classic 33 1/3 and 45 RPM records, and it also has a built-in switchable phono preamp, allowing your giftee to connect it directly to a computer or home stereo.

Find It: Amazon


December 16, 2016 – 4:00am