If a bucket of sloths doesn’t make you smile, you might actually be Ebenezer Scrooge. Pro Tip: Smiling more can make you look younger and more attractive. Happy Friday, y’all!
If a bucket of sloths doesn’t make you smile, you might actually be Ebenezer Scrooge. Pro Tip: Smiling more can make you look younger and more attractive. Happy Friday, y’all!
Get movin’, Toto. The best way to stay dry in the rain is by running.
Mashed potatoes and gravy aren’t the most visually appealing foods in the world. Normally we shovel them down with a standard metal spoon (unless you use your hands, but no one’s asking).But what if spoons didn’t look like, ya know, “spoons”?
Jinhyun Jeon, a grad student from the Design Academy Eidhoven, created cutlery made to enhance the way we eat by stimulating more senses than just taste. She crafted the spoons (and other utensils) with five sensory elements in mind: color, tactility, temperature, volume and weight, and form.
The still shots of the nubby, bulbous, and colorful spoons may make you blush, but they’ve got some science behind their unconventional appearance. Jeon says she was inspired by synesthesia, a condition that blends some people’s senses. How’s it work? For synesthetes (the people that experience synesthesia) one sense can trigger another, like seeing a color when hearing a letter[1].So by combining not-so-normal textures, colors, and shapes, these spoons stimulate the mouth beyond the textures and temperatures of food alone.
The spoons shown in the video are ceramic and have different colored glazes. Jeon crafted other utensils from stainless steel, silver, or plastic all with the same intention: bring more awareness to eating.
Jeon says challenging our senses, not just our tastebuds, can enrich the eating experience. She says the utensils help people eat more mindfully by focusing on each and every bite. The spoons are undoubtedly crazy looking, but would probably be fun to try out (in the privacy of our own homes). Fun bonus: the video’s got all sort of interesting projects for your perusal. We happen to think the spoons are especially cool, right? If so…
Would you buy these unconventional spoons? Do you think they can really make a difference? Let us know in the comment section below or tweet the author @nicmcdermott.
Also check out Greatist’s Complete Collection of Weekly Viral Videos!
Sam Gordon wants to be a professional soccer player when she grows up. But this little phenom might be heading to the Super Bowl rather than the World Cup. Millions of people have watched Gordon’s insanely fast little legs juke, jive, and sprint their way to football fame, all thanks to one YouTube video posted by her dad.
In Gordon’s first season playing football for her Salt Lake City gremlin league team, the pint-size girl rushed nearly 2,000 yards, racking up 35 touchdowns and 65 tackles. She’s also nine-years-old, weighs less than 60 pounds, and plays on a team of all boys.
Underneath that enormous helmet, she’s got a mess of tousled sweaty hair, and a ton of talent. And not just for a girl. According to her father Brent Gordon, out of the 172 kids in the district who tried out, Gordon tested the fastest in every speed and agility drill. (That sh!t cray.)
Her father captured Gordon’s talent on video and posted a highlight reel to YouTube called “Girl football player is fast and fun to watch.” Sounds like a bit of an undersell given that Gordon’s video has now earned more than 2 million views and counting. She’s undoubtedly fast, and so fun to watch that she’s been compared to football greats on NFL.com.
Some commenters voice concern over the fact that she’s a girl playing a contact-heavy, male-dominated sport, and that in a few years she won’t be able to keep up. What does Gordon have to say? “It’s just fun because all the boys are like, “Woah… it’s a girl,” she said via Skype on Good Morning America Thursday morning.
As long as she’s enjoying herself and destroying the game, well then, get it girl! Plus who cares, she’d rather play soccer anyways.
Any “The Simpsons” fans out there? Here’s a live action version of the opening scene, with real actors!
(Source: joannagoddard.blogspot.com)