A Ninja Museum Is Coming to Japan

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Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

Ninjas are a dying breed, but the Japan Ninja Council has come up with a new plan to drum up excitement around the iconic warriors. As the Associated Press reports, the organization plans to open a ninja museum in Tokyo in 2018.

The plan is part of a nationwide “Cool Japan” initiative, which aims to promote the country’s many cultural treasures leading up to the Tokyo Olympics in 2020. In addition to building a new museum, the council also plans to found an academy dedicated to instructing a new generation of ninjas. According to the AP, there’s only one true Ninja (Jinichi Kawakami, a master of the Koga ninja school) left in the country.

The covert spies were most common from the 15th to the 17th centuries, but the council insists that the values of dedication and humility the ninjas displayed are still useful today. The country’s Aichi Prefecture agrees—last year the region put out a call for six full-time ninjas in an effort to promote “warlord tourism.”

[h/t Skift]


February 26, 2017 – 4:00pm

‘Bob’s Burgers’ Is Releasing a 112-Song Album This Spring

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Fox

With seven seasons and counting, there’s plenty of Bob’s Burgers content out there for viewers to enjoy. On May 12, fans will have something else to chew on: a full-length Bob’s Burgers album, comprised of 112 short songs from the series, Pitchfork reports.

Familiar voices featured in the compilation include cast regulars like Kristen Schaal, H. Jon Benjamin, John Roberts, and Dan Mintz. The collection will also showcase several guest comedians who’ve lent their talents to the show, including Jordan Peele, Bill Hader, and Aziz Ansari.

This isn’t the first project to celebrate the program’s memorable soundtrack. In 2013, real-life artists covered songs from the show for a web series called “Bob’s Buskers” (you can watch an animated St. Vincent perform “Bad Girls” below). The Bob’s Burgers Music Album will feature those songs as well as classics from the series like “It’s Thanksgiving for Everybody,” “The Harry Truman Song,” and “Butts, Butts, Butts.”

[h/t Pitchfork]


February 23, 2017 – 11:30am

Indian School Specializes in Educating Elderly Women

Though girls still face numerous obstacles when pursuing an education in India, the country’s number of female students is on the rise. One school in Phangane (just outside of Mumbai) targets a demographic that was denied many of the opportunities young people in India have today. At Aajibaichi Shala, older women, many of whom are grandmothers, take part in a one-year program to receive the education they missed out on as kids.

Classes include basic literacy lessons like learning the alphabet and signing names. “As long as I’m alive, I want to learn,” 65-year-old student Sunanda Datatri tells Great Big Story. “When a girl is educated, we all benefit. So every grandmother should also pursue her dreams and get her education.” You can check out the full story in the video above.

[h/t Great Big Story]

Header/banner images: Manan Vatsyayana/Getty


February 23, 2017 – 9:00am

Average Life Expectancy Set to Break 90 in Parts of the World by 2030

filed under: health
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South Korea is on track to achieve the highest human life expectancy of all time, according to a new study published in The Lancet [PDF]. As the BBC reports, rates in the country are likely to break age 90 by the year 2030.

For their research, Imperial College London and the World Health Organization studied the lifespans of residents in 35 industrialized countries. The life expectancy of a baby born in South Korea today is 82, putting the country in 11th place globally. In the next 13 years, the female life expectancy is set to surpass 90, placing South Korea ahead of current world leaders such as Japan, Switzerland, and Singapore. The country’s male lifespan will also increase, but to the lower age of 84.

The upward trends projected for South Korea can be seen across the globe. Life expectancy rates are projected to improve in every one of countries researchers analyzed. As male and female lifestyles become more similar, the mortality gap between genders will also start to close. The probability of a worldwide life expectancy boost was found to be 65 percent for women and 85 percent for men.

According to the study, the countries with the longest lifespans by 2030 will be the following: South Korea, France, and Japan for women, and South Korea, Australia, and Switzerland for men. The United States likely won’t earn a top slot. By that time the American life expectancy is predicted to be 80 for men and 83 for women, the worst statistics of any wealthy country. The U.S. currently ranks 31st overall.

The researchers cite lack of universal healthcare and high inequality as factors holding the country back. The nations that perform best, on the other hand, “do so by investing in their health system and making sure it reaches everyone,” researcher Majid Ezzati tells the BBC.

The new findings not only apply to projected life expectancy at birth but also past age 65. Most of the gains made in longevity will come from improved health in seniors rather than reduced mortality rates in children. The study is based on the assumption that countries will continue to progress in the same direction over the coming years. Unforeseen factors, such as natural disasters or medical breakthroughs, could skew the data one way or the other.

[h/t BBC]


February 22, 2017 – 1:45pm

10 Towering Facts About Giant Sequoias

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What can grow as tall as a skyscraper and live for millennia? That would be the giant sequoia, one of the most impressive tree species on the planet. Here are 10 facts about America’s largest living residents.

1. THEY HAVE THE THICKEST BARK ON EARTH.

The bark of a giant sequoia may be the thickest of any tree we know—on some specimens the outer layer of bark measures over two feet thick at the base. This formidable exterior provides the trees with super-powered protection. Their bark also doesn’t contain any flammable pitch or resin, and if it were to ignite in a forest fire, the girth would slow flames from reaching the wood inside.

2. THEY DEPEND ON FOREST FIRES TO REGENERATE.

Prescribed fire smoke at Sequoia National Park. Image credit: Daniel Mayer via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY 2.0

Giant sequoias not only can survive forest fires, they thrive on them. When a sequoia grove catches fire, the heat opens up cones on the forest floor and releases the seeds inside. The blaze eats up any brush or deadwood that’s accumulated on the ground while leaving behind nutrient-rich ash in which the saplings can flourish. Forest rangers only became aware of the renewing benefits of fire a few decades ago. Prior to that, they would extinguish every flame they saw then wonder why no new sequoias were growing. Today rangers will intentionally set controlled burns to simulate the natural process.

3. THEY’RE RESISTANT TO DISEASE.

MARK RALSTON/Getty

Fire isn’t the only threat a giant sequoia is built to endure. Thanks to a high concentration of tannin, an insoluble chemical compound found in many coniferous trees, the trees are immune to most diseases. Not only does the astringent substance protect the sequoia from fungus, it also safeguards it from insect attacks.

4. THESE BIG TREES COME FROM SMALL SEEDS.

The largest tree on Earth is born from a very tiny seed—91,000 of them add up to a single pound. Giant sequoias can’t sprout from roots or stumps like the coast redwood can, which means all the reproductive responsibilities fall to the seeds. Animals like squirrels, chickarees, and beetles are instrumental in cracking open sequoia cones and dispersing the contents. But for a seed to germinate it needs to make direct contact with bare, mineral soil (which is why fires are so vital). Giant sequoias release 300,000 to 400,000 seeds per year, so there are plenty of chances for the conditions to be just right.

5. THEY CAN LIVE TO BE REALLY, REALLY OLD.

FlippinOats via Flickr // CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Before the first Olympics were held or the first pyramids were built in Mexico, the oldest living sequoia had already started to grow. The President, located in California’s Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, is estimated to be about 3200 years old. Despite its old age, the giant hasn’t slowed down at all. The annual wood production of older sequoias is actually greater than that of younger specimens. And while three millennia may be more time than you can wrap your head around, it isn’t a record-breaker: Bristlecone pines and Alerce trees both live to be older than giant sequoias.

6. THEY PRODUCED THE LARGEST LIVING ORGANISM ON EARTH (MAYBE).

General Sherman. Image credit: Tuxyso via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 3.0

Giant sequoias don’t lay claim to the tallest tree on Earth (that distinction belongs to coast redwoods, a close relative), but they do have the largest tree by volume. General Sherman in California’s Sequoia National Park boasts a mass of 52,500 cubic feet, which is over half the volume of an Olympic-sized swimming pool. The trunk alone weighs about 1400 tons or the equivalent of 15 blue whales. According to the National Park Service, all that lumber could be used to build 120 average-sized homes.

As for whether or not General Sherman is the largest living thing on Earth, it depends on who you’re asking. Under some definitions, the title belongs to the Great Barrier Reef or a 100-acre grove of Aspens in Utah that share a single root system. But if you limit the pool to single-trunked trees, the giant sequoia takes the cake.

7. THE DEATH OF TWO SEQUOIAS LED TO THE BIRTH OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE.

Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

European-Americans first stumbled upon giant sequoias in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in 1853, according to The Guardian. The initial instinct of gold miners in the area was to chop one of the trees down, an act that took three weeks to complete. Once felled, a section of bark from “Mammoth Tree” was shipped to San Francisco for an exhibition. The bark was propped up to house a piano for performances before eventually ending up on Broadway in New York City. The following year, a second tree, dubbed “Mother of the Forest,” was toppled and its bark sent to the Crystal Palace in London. Meanwhile, the stump that Mammoth Tree left behind was used as a dance floor by flocks of tourists.

Not everyone was complacent to the destruction. In 1864, California senator John Conness urged Congress to pass a bill that would grant protection to Yosemite Valley and the neighboring sequoia grove. He argued:

“From the Calaveras grove some sections of a fallen tree were cut during and pending the great World’s Fair that was held in London some years since…The purpose of this bill is to preserve one of these groves from devastation and injury. The necessity of taking early possession and care of these great wonders can easily be seen and understood.”

Once passed, that bill opened the door for the establishment of the first-ever national park at Yellowstone, and ultimately, America’s National Park Service.

8. THEODORE ROOSEVELT WAS A FAN.

Theodore Roosevelt standing beneath a giant sequoia in Mariposa Grove. Image credit: Houghton Library, Harvard University/American Museum of Natural History

An avid outdoorsman, Theodore Roosevelt was enchanted by the sequoias he saw out West. During a camping trip to Yosemite, his friend and fellow conservationist John Muir convinced the president to add the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias to the park, thus granting the trees federal protection. Roosevelt said of the giants during a 1903 speech in Sacramento:

“As regards some of the trees, I want them preserved because they are the only things of their kind in the world. Lying out at night under those giant Sequoias was lying in a temple built by no hand of man, a temple grander than any human architect could by any possibility build, and I hope for the preservation of the groves of giant trees simply because it would be a shame to our civilization to let them disappear. They are monuments in themselves[…]”

9. ONE OF THE MOST FAMOUS GIANT SEQUOIAS RECENTLY COLLAPSED.

Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

Up until January 2017, one of the most intimate ways to experience a giant sequoia was by passing through one. Pioneer Cabin Tree in Calaveras Big Trees State Park had featured a tunnel big enough for a car to pass through since the late 19th century. The owner of the Calaveras North Grove carved out the opening to compete with a similar tree-tunnel attraction in Yosemite. For decades tourists were allowed to drive straight through it, but in recent years the only way to enter the tunnel was on foot. The tree fell to the ground and splintered apart on impact on January 8 during a severe rainstorm. Apparently the loss wasn’t a total shock: The tree had been leaning for years, and prior to receiving its hole it had sustained a fire scar that kept the top from growing.

10. YOU CAN FIND THEM OUTSIDE OF CALIFORNIA.

Giant sequoia in Catton Park, UK. Image credit: Rob Andrews via Flickr // CC BY 2.0

At one point giant sequoias flourished throughout the Northern Hemisphere, but their distribution has since become much more limited. Most sequoia trees are concentrated in 77 groves located throughout Northern California. A handful of specimens can be found elsewhere, thanks in part to horticultural trends of the 19th century. Exotic gardens were all the rage in England by the time the first sequoia was discovered by European-Americans in the 1850s. Today some of the oldest sequoias growing outside their natural range are housed in British castle gardens and arboretums. They can be spotted in other European countries as well: In France, the trees were once planted along entire streets.


February 22, 2017 – 12:00pm

Frank Gehry Is Teaching an Online Course in Architecture

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Ethan Miller/Getty

Aspiring architects will soon be able to learn from one of the most accomplished living designers in the field—and they won’t have to leave their homes to do it. As Dezeen reports, the online education service MasterClass is launching an architecture course taught by Frank Gehry.

For $90, students will have access to 15 video lessons led by the iconic visionary. Throughout the course, Gehry will discuss his own design philosophy while he walks students through case studies and helps them find their own creative signatures. Enrollment also includes a downloadable workbook complete with assignments and lesson recaps. After completing a project, students will have the opportunity to upload videos and receive feedback from their peers, with Gehry providing personal critiques to a select number of students.

Born in Toronto in 1929, Gehry has designed some of the most recognizable buildings erected in the past century. His resume includes the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, and the Louis Vuitton Foundation building in Paris.

Gehry’s architecture course, which goes live this spring, will mark his first stint as an online professor. MasterClass is known for attracting extraordinary talent to lead their classes, including Aaron SorkinHans Zimmer, and Werner Herzog. Some of the professors currently teaching classes in their respective fields are Serena Williams, Gordon Ramsay, and Dustin Hoffman.

[h/t Dezeen]


February 22, 2017 – 11:30am

Watch a Supercut of Every Oscar Winner for Best Visual Effects

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Universal

Oscar winners can look quite different from one decade to the next, but perhaps no category has evolved as much as Best Visual Effects. The honor was first bestowed at the inaugural Academy Awards in 1929 to the silent film Wings (actually released in 1927) for its realistic depiction of air combat scenes. Back then the category was called “Engineering Effects.” In the years since, stop-motion gorillas, animatronic dinosaurs, and CGI spaceships have all been recognized by the Academy. The YouTube user Burger Fiction recently updated its supercut of every Best Visual Effects winner from the ceremony’s history. You can watch the epic video above.

[h/t Sploid]

Header/banner images: Universal


February 22, 2017 – 9:00am

Family Cracks Open Chicken Egg to Find Another Egg Inside

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iStock

There’s a reason some people feel lucky when discovering two yolks inside a single egg. Double yolks are rare—they occur in roughly one of every 1000 eggs. As Sploid reports, a family recently discovered something even more remarkable laid by their hen. They cracked open an egg to find not just a bonus yolk, but an entire bonus egg kept perfectly intact.

The phenomenon, while uncommon, isn’t unheard of. It’s called counter-peristalsis contraction, and it happens when a second egg starts forming before the egg that precedes it exits the hen’s reproductive system. In such cases, the new oocyte (the part of the egg that becomes the yolk) moves through chicken’s oviduct per usual, collecting membranes and albumen (the white part) along the way. If a fully formed egg has been contracted back into the oviduct from the uterus, the whites of the still-forming egg will amass around it.

The result is a Russian-nesting-doll situation at the breakfast table. According to the uploader of the video above, no one was brave enough to eat the egg or the egg-within-the-egg, but it didn’t go to waste: It was used to make hair conditioner the old-fashioned way instead.

[h/t Sploid]


February 21, 2017 – 1:00pm

Help Digitize History by Transcribing World War I-Era Love Letters

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British postcard from World War I. Image credit: Europeana

In addition to bringing about groundbreaking technological advancements and hot fashion trends, World War I also produced some deliciously sappy love letters. Now, as Hyperallergic reports, Europeana is asking for help adding some of them to their digital archive. The online cultural heritage platform is hosting a “Love Letter Run,” calling on the public to transcribe romantic correspondences dating back to the First World War.

The project is part of Europeana’s World War I transcription initiative running through the end of the war’s centennial in 2018. The site’s announcement reads:

“As the First World War raged on, so did the hearts of the husbands, wives, and lovers of Europe[…]In the Love Letter Run, we present you stories of romance and betrayal, of lust and longing, heartbreak and new beginnings – all the makings of your favourite melodrama, but from genuine handwritten sources of real, lived experiences.”

Documents in English, French, German, Dutch, Croatian, Slovenian, and Greek are waiting to be transcribed. In the collection, readers will find poems, postcards, and even an illustrated book of love songs that belonged to a French soldier. Check out some highlights from Europeana’s archive below:

[h/t Hyperallergic]

All images courtesy of Europeana.


February 19, 2017 – 4:00pm

Most College-Bound Seniors Know ‘Literally Nothing’ About Paying Off Student Loans

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More Americans are seeking out a higher education than ever before—and they’re paying for it. At more than $1.4 trillion, the nation’s total student loan debt is the highest it’s ever been. On top of that, many borrowers are left unable to pay their loans back after graduation. As a new survey from NextGenVest suggests, the fact that most high school seniors have no idea what they’re signing up for when they take out student loans may have something to do with that.

Kelly Peeler, founder of the college tuition payment mentoring service NextGenVest, recently reported the results of the survey at Forbes. After talking to 225 college-bound high school seniors from nine cities via SMS, the surveyors found that 68 percent of respondents said “they literally knew nothing” about student loan payment or refinancing services available after college.

More often than not, high schools are doing little to educate students on the subject. According to the study, just 31 percent of respondents had a financial aid workshop, scholarship session, or college financing–focused parent night offered at their school. When incoming undergrads are left to make sense of aid packages on their own, they can feel overwhelmed. Forty-five percent of students described navigating financial aid paperwork as more stressful than taking a standardized test.

If you’re one of the millions of Americans already burdened with student loan debt, it’s not too late to learn some strategies for paying it off. If you’re a graduate still on the job hunt, be on the lookout for benefits packages that offer built-in loan repayments. As a last resort, borrowers should look into changing plans or even deferring payments to avoid defaulting on their loans or having their wages garnished by their lenders.

[h/t Forbes]


February 17, 2017 – 5:00pm