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Friday, March 19, 2010

Retrofuture Transportation Showcase, Part 2


"QUANTUM SHOT" #618
Link - by Avi Abrams



Do not allow anybody to steal your excitement about the future!

It seems that in the early 1950s and well into the 1970s many (if not the majority) of designers and engineers still felt the unbounded optimism about developing technology and man's ability to conquer the unknown - and this exuberance was gloriously reflected in many wild designs from leading futurism concept artists of that period.

We feel compelled to continue with our retro-future series, and today we present the next installment in "Futuristic Transportation" - read the first part here. Wait for images to load, then scroll to enjoy:

CARS...

Feast your eyes on this wild sketch for an automobile, a product of Ford design studio in 1954:


(image via)

Firebird III concept by GM, 1958:


(image via)

Another "Advanced Styling" rendering from Ford:


(image via)

Goodyear's "Amtronic" concept vehicle:


(image via)

Left: W. C. Jerome's pretty strange prototype - on the right is very futuristic concept by Alex Tremulis:


(images via)

General Motors traveling Futurama was a sort of technological circus that was meant to excite people about motoring possibilities of the future:



(images via, bottom: Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Bill Cotter, via)

Lots of cars needed a lot of multi-lane highways: the image below is from the World Fair 1939 in New York, called Citta' Del 1960:



(images via)

Even cooler: "Endless Belt Trains for the Future Cities", 1932 -


(image via)

You gotta love this automobile, with production scheduled for 1942!.. if not for the war... It has the classic aerodynamic shape that we wrote about in this series: Part and Part 2:


(cover of the "Popular Science" magazine, June 1940 - fragment, see the whole cover here)

Syd Mead is probably the best industrial designer to emerge during the early 1970s boom of futurism. His vehicles still look exciting after decades, and there is something in his "luminous space" and vibrant colors that speaks dearly to our heart and eye:




(art by Syd Mead from his book "Sentinel")

Syd Mead's student work from 1958 looked pretty groovy already:



As a side note, 1958 was pretty wild year for outrageous car concepts: here is the atrocious LAND BOAT -



UPDATE: this is actually an exaggerated concept - spoof of the excesses of the 1950s car design (from a book "The Last Dream-o-Rama").

As for some future scenarios... in case of apocalyptic shortage of gas, for example, try the solution from occupied Holland, 1941:


(image via)

More recent solution: 2008 British Steam Car, capable of reaching 170 mph (more info):


(image via)

Modular truck with extending cabin:


(image via)

TRAINS...

A fragment of futuristic train (possibly Russian in origin... similar to some Luigi Colani's designs):


(image credit: Marcin Jakubowski)

Soviet monorail trains - and American cars? - on the cover of Communist scientific magazine from the 1960s:



Russian designers did indeed dream about American cars at the time, here is proof (below left). In the meantime they were coming up with prototypes for screw-drive off-road vehicle (below right):



BOATS...

Don't miss the Screw Ship, 1939 - better than a submarine! (more info)



(images via)

Even weirder are the Turbo-Wheel Liners...

Interesting concepts of cruise ships (and mega-yachts):


(images via)

AIRPLANES...



Some of the VTOL (vertical lift-off and landing planes) concepts were quite radical looking (see our article covering most of them here). One concept we missed is this Adam Vought's plane, designed in 1965 - Vought V-460/V-485:


(images via 1, 2)

Not many people remember Bill Horton's "Wingless Plane" - see video - basically a lifting body concept, quite radical for 1952:



(images via Popular Science magazine)

Even stranger is the unknown prototype plane (below left), or rather just a flying turbine:


(images via)

The VTOL plane on above right is the infamous SNECMA - Coleoptere from France (more info).



Concepts of some heavy bombers from the 1970s:


(images via)

Supersonic planes "New York Brunch - Paris Lunch" from Vanadium Corp. of America, 1958 -


(image via)

Don't miss "Strange Lifting Force for A Huge Airplane" idea from old Modern Mechanix, click here. A gyro-plane on a humongous scale. And the imposing Atomic Plane from the same source.

MISC...




Why move only the furniture? You can transport the whole house inside this truck (and the moving crew can travel in double-decker comfort, too):



Sectional Buses, 1948 - more info:



Unnamed hybrid vehicle. Wait... it actually has a name: "The Rad" - and, it's a concept for Batman Returns!


(image via)

Desert bus replaces camels - provided there is a thriving tourism industry (more info):


(image credit: Modern Mechanix)


(left: the wood cutter of the future, via - right: rubber-footed mountain busses, via, bottom: Curtis-Wright's Bee, via)

Very strange method of lunar transportation, suggested by Mattel Inc. Toymakers:



Other vintage toys still retain some charm:



(bottom image: "Operations in Antarctica", by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Bill Cotter, via)

The Mars Liner concept, by Christoph Anczykowski:


(image credit: Christoph Anczykowski)

The Ultimate Transport, of course, is your private asteroid - hollowed out and outfitted with stellar drives (the idea proposed in John W. Campbell's Analog way back in the 1950s):



(illustration by Roy D. Scaffo, Scaffo Studio, via)

If you can't snatch an asteroid, the Empire State Building will have to do:


(concept art for the Thunderbirds TV series)


CONTINUE TO "MIND-BOGGLING TRANSPORTATION"! ->

ALSO READ: MONORAIL WONDERS! ->

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READ RECENT POSTS:


Lovely Japanese Vintage Ads

Industrial Design with a Deliciously Cute Factor

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

Incl. "Cat Masters Fridge Climbing"


Car Dashboards as Works of Art

New & old, weird & beautiful "dashes"

COMMENTS::

18 Comments:

Anonymous Gregoryno6 said...

Cars of the future actually looked futuristic, once upon a time. Designers today just want their car to look like the other guy's car.
If only the other guy's car was a Citroen GT!

___  
Blogger GMpilot said...

Oh, where to begin...?

The more I see of those old Modern Mechanix covers, the more I'm convinced that the manufacturers of paint—namely, red, yellow, and black—were going to be very rich in the future!
There were so many memories brought back in this piece. I took the Futurama ride at the NY World's Fair in '64, and to this day I wonder how they made it all look not just real and plausible, but inevitable.
It's one of the pieces of the future I feel I've been cheated out of.

The Amtronic concept vehicle also existed as a model kit (1969). I kept mine for years! As far as I know it has not been reissued. *sigh* I know a lot more about plastic modeling now—I could really do it justice. I remember the main cabin as having four lounge-style seats, facing each other...and mounted in the roof, a TV screen!

The screw-drive vehicle was seriously considered by the Army as off-road transportation, also around 1964. Chrysler built it, and I recall seeing it in one of their advertisements on TV.

As for the Empire State Building becoming a spaceship; don't be fooled! All that heavy metal was being used to move the building in one piece (which, tragically, failed). That comes from an episode of the old British SF series Thunderbirds.

And yes, the Land Boat is an abomination. I'm happy to have missed that.
Many thanks for a backward look.

___  
Blogger Daud NAM said...

Looks like the unnamed vehicle is actually the Batmobile in emergency Batmissile mode, from "Batman Returns".
Just my 0.02$ !

Also the moving Empire State Building is indeed a Thunderbirds comic panel. The related TV serie episode should be "Terror in NYC". Supermarionation FTW...

___  
Blogger David Alexander McDonald said...

The "Rad" is the Batmissile from BATMAN RETURNS -- that's the concept art for it. Basically the batmobile with the sides blown off and the wheels pulled inline, like a rollerblade.

___  
Blogger Zach said...

Shucks, guess I'm the third person to catch the Rad as the Batmissile. Oh well, still a fantastic post nonetheless.

___  
Anonymous John Lee said...

Great stuff!
The 1958 LAND BOAT is a fairly recent Bruce McCall spoof of American 50s 60s concept cars from his book "The Last Dream-O-Rama." He's the guy who created those great Bulgemobile ads in the old National Lampoon and does a lot of covers and articles for the New Yorker

___  
OpenID cobrabay said...

The left hand one of those "heavy bombers from the 1970s" is more of a late-50s, early 60s bomber. It's an artists impression of the proposed, but never-built Convair NX-2 nuclear-powered bomber.

___  
Blogger Jeremy said...

@ GMpilot -- the Amtronic has been reissued at least twice (by the original maker: AMT, hence AMTronic) since the original release -- once in the late Eighties and again in 2000 for their Millennium Collection. Can be had on Ebay relatively cheaply. I have a couple of each release.

As far as the hollow asteroid, it was originally conceived by author Larry Niven. Take a small nickel-iron asteroid. Drill a hole down the center, fill it with big bags of water. Aim a parabolic mirror at it and set it to rotating. The outer shell of the asteroid will melt, and once the heat hits the water, they flash into steam -- poof! Instant iron bubble.

___  
OpenID brooksmoses said...

A couple of corrections:

First, the Firebird III is a GM design, not Ford. And from 1958 (first shown in 1959), not 1955.

Second, as John Lee says, the Land Yacht is not a 1958 design; it's from a 2001 book entitled "The Last Dream-o-Rama" that's a humorous "retrospective" of 1950s futurism, exaggerated into silliness.

___  
Blogger Avi Abrams said...

Awesome comments - thank you all! Post updated.

___  
Blogger Kristopher said...

Those "heavy bombers" were a pair of nuclear powered aircraft candidates, cooked up before ICBM tech was perfected.

One of the prototype engines is on public display in Idaho.

http://www.atomictourist.com/ebr.htm

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The unknown tubular plane is a Collins Radio prototype by Alexander Lippisch that was housed in the Collins hanger at the Cedar Rapids, Iowa airport sometime after WW II when the German engineers were relocated to the U.S. I'm not sure on the dates, but the information is available in a number of books on experimental aircraft.

___  
Blogger Gabriel said...

Wonderful collection, as ever. Love the site! :)

The first cutaway picture of the "Interesting concepts of cruise ships..." pair is from an issue of the Thunderbirds comic serials. I have an early 90s collected edition which features this image as a double page spread and the story in which (iirc) the ship is targeted by South American revolutionaries!

___  
Blogger Eric said...

I used to have that Mattel moon walker toy! I believe it was for the Major Matt Mason toy line. You flipped that lever in the back and it crawled along.

___  
Anonymous Ken said...

I had the Mattel moowalker, too. Even as a kid I could see how impractical it was. When the legs turned it would thrash from side-to-side, throwing the astronaut off instantly.

___  
Blogger Eric said...

Yes, Ken, it would have been like a bucking bronco machine. My neck aches thinking about it.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i like all the techniques and the models...

___  
Anonymous kate Middleton said...

awesome pics nice work

___  

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  • I highly advise people to watch this, it was really EPIC when it was shown on C4 in the UK last year. Great post Avi, as per usual.
    Read more

  • I watched it yesterday on German tv.
    Really cool.
    Read more

  • I watched it the other day. It was REALLY cool. Should make a man proud what his little guys go through.

    And we should all be so blessed that one little guy survived for us to be born!
    Read more

  • Hope they give some credits to Woody Allen.
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  • I like it so much; that I put it on mywebchannel :-)
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  • ekranoplane video :)

    http://www.military.cz/russia/navy/ekranoplan/km4.mpg
    Read more

  • it makes me so sad to see the lunokhod like that
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  • @Overlord: these are Muslims praying in the direction of Mecca.
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  • My # wasn't 7, it was 6.
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  • The last nun photo, with the group of nuns walking past a poster with naked cartoon ladies on it, is the work of René Maltête: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:7-peches_capitaux.jpg
    Read more

  • The ship breaking yards are E not W:

    21°25'05.02 N 72°12'26.53 E
    Read more

  • I really picked 7, without thinking. Weird...
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  • a C10-based hot dog and sandwich stand: killer philly steaks and cheezewiz dogs

    http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/12981
    Read more

  • Wow, I've actually visited three of these. (the 1 in Costa Rica,then the 2 in the Czech rep.)
    nice post. :)
    Read more

  • its like..........wwwWWWOOOWWWwww........
    Read more

  • Too Cool!!!! As an airline Captain I spend 200+ hours in a plane each month. Why not live in one? That would be completely awesome.
    Read more

  • Great collection! I've actually seen a few in the Penndel area of Pa. Very cool stuff!
    Read more

  • hungarian one (second image):http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Il%E2%80%9318
    Read more

  • Wow, this is a fantastic article! I'm actually writing a Scifi book about a super volcano that threatens mankind. It's a real threat.
    Read more

  • only they forgot the earth is a sphere, so eventually east Asia will collide with west America.
    Read more

  • Very good article.

    Those pictures in bottom were a little silly ;P
    Read more

  • This is a great load of information. It's funny because I was just pondering this whole thing especially since the earthquake in Chile. Thanks for sharing Simon.
    Read more

  • Huzzah! Great Britain still independent 250 million years in the future
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  • Where is the polar shifting?
    Read more

  • Clearly they haven't calculated for Kirstie Alley's ass.
    Everyone knows it is going to outlive Kirstie herself and will someday be larger than most landmasses.
    Read more

  • Love your site, but hate this theme. You should change the colors (get rid of the brown) and use white background. Hey, just because your blog is named after coffee doesn't mean it has to be brown. :)
    Read more

  • the 2012 movie made a cool explosion e-card, its worth checking out :) http://bit.ly/cKHVQU
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  • These pics r koooooool
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  • As an anthropologist, I find Hancock's work very interesting and appreciate the questions he brings. I've seen too many instances of authorities telling a dozen people that each of their examples are "outliers" or "have no precedent' when their examples all in fact reinforce one another. Hancock's work seems to evolve, and I'm not sure if he even believes some of what he investigates. I think it's unfortunate that he dwells so much on Hapgood and largely discredited map "anomalies", he undermines his own good points by going back to that line of thinking. But he makes some very strong cases in my opinion on cultural traditions and oral history, and ferreting out anomalies that should be discussed.
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  • what the fudge man i do not believe in that 2012 crap it's a bunch of B.S if any believes that they are either mentally retarded, high or they have to be sober
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  • sup jotos
    Read more

  • Hi all,
    I seem to remember reading some years ago that humanity's DNA diversity shows a bottleneck about 12000 years ago, possible caused by a calamity that severely reduced the number of people on the planet. Sorry, I've no links or attributions for this. Anyone heard or read this, I love to delve deeper into it.
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  • Hi Mike

    I think your numbers are a bit off. Try 72000 years ago and wiki/google 'Toba supervolcano'.
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  • I saw plate tectonics time machine in Dresden Nature Science Museum - it was amazing to turn the wheel of Earth time, and it is so impressive to see all the changes for so long time in minutes...
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  • DRB ist my most favorite site next to Wikipedia so I would like to contribute to its success. I'm sorry but I feel rather sceptic about these images that show the face of the earth in the distant future after all these pictures show Africa as a whole. This ignores the Great Rift Valley that will seperate Eastern Africa with countries like Somalia or Kenya from the bigger part of Africa.

    Despite that: Keep up the good work!
    Read more

  • Thank you - great to hear these words... as for the Rift Valley, you're absolutely right - something's gonna come out of it, as it is very active region.
    Read more

  • Sadly enough, I can't envision that as a realistic possibility for this world. Still, so many of us dream of a future in which humans might co-exist perfectly with nature. It would be ideal.
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  • In this line, take a look at this web: http://tokyogenso.exblog.jp/ similar to that unknown source works.
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  • Where's Disney's initial blueprints for Epcot Center?
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  • the unknown is from Imperial Boy http://tksn.web.infoseek.co.jp/
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  • What about Palo Solari and his arcologies?

    http://www.arcosanti.org/
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  • Great collection of pics. What's interesting is that even if those visions were to come to fruition, there will still be used syringes and crack rocks strewn over these futuristic landscapes.

    No one seems to consider how telling it is that we should be so inclined to dream up a cosmetically distinct atmosphere while we remain entire as destructive and myopic as ever. Such visions are basically Cosmo magazine pinups for architecture- here cover up your psychological faults and distortions with plum red lipstick.

    Go dreams!
    Read more

  • M. Christian - that's an absolutely fantastic selection of architectural renderings you have chosen for this article. How long did it take for you to put this all together? Many kudos...
    Read more

  • Some of those older ones remind me of the work of Winsor McCay, though less stylish.
    Read more

  • Actually those sliding pavements have been a reality. They existed in 1912, so for someone in 1913 to imagine them to be the way of the future isn't so outlandish!

    http://www.damninteresting.com/the-remarkable-pneumatic-people-mover
    Read more

  • Wow.

    These are amazing illustrations!

    Let's go to the future, right now.

    Who has a time machine?
    Read more

  • heh as cool as the waterfall castle is i coulden't help but think how terrible a place it would be to live there. it would be so loud all the time! might as well live next tot he airport
    Read more

  • Some of this project are only artistic vision of architects. This will never been built or only for fun or tourist attraction.
    In Poland we have such attraction. it's called upsidedown house and it's only purpose is to lure turists.
    Read more

  • Great images,
    I have done a documentary about visionary architecture.
    See here:
    http://www.solarisfilm.se/great.htm
    and here:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKp2qVEtQL0
    Read more

  • "An utilitarian nightmare..."

    It should be "a utilitarian nightmare." The determinant of the use of "a" or "an" is the sound leading the word not the letter. So even though "utilitarian" begins with a vowel, is has the consonant sound "yoo" and thus requires "a" in front of it.
    Read more

  • That's really a fantastic post ! added to my favourite blogs list... I have been reading your blog last couple of weeks and enjoy every bit. Thanks!
    Read more

  • Dont You Think people love the green in fact need it ....
    Read more

  • there's something about the original hand renderings / illustrations that makes me a bit sad that they are quickly becoming a thing of the past. They're so great, and required so much talent.
    Read more

  • I need a car with seats like that! The only other thing it needs is a plexi-glass barrier and a loud stereo, and I'm set for a road trip with the kids.
    Read more

  • Damn that mathproblem. I took me a couple of minutes of counting before I solved it. But it gave me a great feeling of satisfaction after solving it! It is worth it!
    Read more

  • The trick is not to over think the math problem, but when i noticed a pattern, it all made sense.
    Read more

  • At first sight this math can't be resolved without computer but actually it is really good exercise for mental calculating!
    Read more

  • For the problem painted by N. P. Bogdanov-Belsky:

    If we know that:
    •10^2 = 100
    •11^2 = 121
    •12^2 = 144
    •100 + 121 + 144 = 365
    •10^2+11^2+12^2 = 13^2+14^2
    then it comes :
    10^2 +11^2 +12^2 + 13^2 +14^2
    = 365 + 365
    so:
    (10^2 +11^2 +12^2 + 13^2 +14^2)/365
    = (365+365) / 365
    = (1+1) / 1
    = 2

    it can be done in mental arithmetic
    Read more

  • Buddy of mine had a early 2000's Ford Torus station wagon and it had rumble seats in it. Very popular on road trips I might add!
    Read more

  • Here's an even earlier GPS-like device, from 1932:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/nationaalarchief/4192749543/in/set-72157623018193396/

    The whole set is very interesting, btw
    Read more

  • The answer is 2.
    It's really easy. :]
    Read more

  • The cat at the end jumps because the balloon pops, the 'water' you're seeing is just the string/ribbon attached to the balloon.
    Read more

  • Cats are capable of anti-gravity and bending space-time ... this capability goes away when they get older.
    Read more

  • Rear-facing seats in the back of station wagons were a regular, even expected feature. The back flips down, leaving a flat floor for load hauling. You had to install the plexiglass barrier yourself...

    Regards,
    Ric
    Read more

  • Question about the math problem:

    Why does 10^2+11^2+12^2 = 13^2+14^2 ?

    Of course it is true, but I am not familiar with the principle.
    Read more

  • There is no any principle here. It's just a weird math fact, which allowed to create such a tricky exercise.
    For mental calculation we don't need to calculate full sum of numerator knowing that the part of it is equal to denominator. We just put in mind that the first summand is 1. And when we calculate the second component of the numerator it is easy to see the final result.
    Read more

  • don't forget about this giant plush pubic louse. Also available: black death, HIV, herpes and swine flu.
    Read more

  • The last animal seems to be a kind ofWolpertinger
    Read more

  • The dead cat figure was made by guro manga artist, Shintaro Kago... you ought to attribute that to him.
    Read more

  • I keep seeing that set of green knives for schoolkids. What's so wrong with a set of cooking knives for schoolkids? What else would they use for cookery?
    Read more

  • Hey, I think I know what that dead cat business is all about! When I was a kid in Japan, we used to sing this song about stepping on the cat. It was sung to the melody of the Flea Waltz which anyone learning the piano would probably know.

    Ne-ko fun-jat-ta
    Ne-ko fun-jat-ta
    Ne-ko fun-ja fun-ja fun-jat-ta
    etc.
    Read more

  • Thank you for all this info on the dead cat. Updated.
    Read more

  • one ot this toy (you can shave your baby) was made by one of the most popular Polish moder artist - Antoni Libera, so I assume that the rest of it is also some kind of performence.
    Read more

  • If I am not mistaken, the "clone baby" in the tank is from an episode of the "X-Files". The baby, if you look closely, resembles David Duchovny.
    Read more

  • THe multi-animal would be a kind of Chimera
    Read more

  • roadkilltoys.com make an excellent line of crushed cuddlies, they have zips so you can stuff them back in, I have Twitch the possum myself
    http://www.roadkilltoys.com/component/page,shop.product_details/flypage,flypage_rk/product_id,1/category_id,5/manufacturer_id,0/option,com_virtuemart/Itemid,80/

    Also, what exactly is the dog with the removable part?
    Read more

  • Wow! Great collection of bizarro toys, and thanks for linking to the Weirdo Toys blog. Glad you liked the toys. Now I get to check out your site....
    Read more

  • Twisted! I'm pretty sure some of those are not for kids....right?
    Read more

  • Bob the killer rabbit from Monte Pythons Holy Grail. My daughter has one of those as thats her favorite movie.
    Read more

  • Some of these toys are really scarry. What insane mind project such things!

    Strange Twisted and bizzare is this car from Poland.
    Read more

  • These toys are going to haunt many children, in their nightmares.. for sure.

    Lol!
    Read more

  • This girl from Montreal, Miss Agonie, also makes all kinds of crazy plush toys, worth a look!
    Read more

  • You didn't have any Little Apple Dolls here, you should see them. I collect them, and I think they're adorable, but some of my friends tell me, that they are creepy. Can't understand why..
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  • Very nice pics!) Crazy steampunk rabbit and Jigsaw puzzle - the best))))
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  • Michael Jackson Doll from Susan's Custom Creepy Dolls is terrifying. Scary Michael Jackson is sitting in a rocking chair, staring at you.
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  • In japan bizarre and weird is an actual selling point. There’s lots of products pushed out and only the truly insane and weird will really get sold in numbers.

    the price tag on some of these are expensive and it has to do with the fact that most Japanese families both parents work. Parents usually feeling guilty give their kids an allowance, this is the same in the US, but the amount given is much higher.

    So kids generally have a lot more spending money and they become consumers at a younger age. So they buy all sorts of knick knacks like these toys.
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  • Mr. Bean looks like Spock!
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  • Wow..I got creeped out just looking at those toys. I think if I had those in my home I wouldn't be able to sleep at night!
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  • The would be elephant in fact is Forgotten one from WOW,lol
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  • The last image kind of reminds me of the Whingdingdilly. One of my favourite books growing up.
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  • The last animal is a Panzeraffant. Got a herd of them in our local zoo.
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  • VMOS asked what the plastic dog with the removable part was, and I have to admit that I was wondering about that as well. So I looked up the product number and found out what it was: a dog sex toy. The removable part is shown as it's being cleaned after usage! Uuuuughhh (*shudders*). Here's the link: http://www.buyer-buying.com/html-www62/dog-sex-toy-420547.htm
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  • whoa...
    A lot of snow!
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  • Wow, thats incredible. Very good stuff dude.

    Jess
    www.isp-logging.net.tc
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  • Snow, snow and snow this year is true Winter Olympic year.
    http://www.vancouver2010olympic.com/en/index
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  • Abrams,
    I have some history for you on your second photo titled 'Huge Vintage Snow fall'. This appears identical to a picture displayed in Suomi's Restaurant in Houghton, Michigan. Houghton is located at the base of the Keweenau peninsula and is known as one of the snow capitals of the state. I do not remember the date of the photo, if you would like more information shoot me an e-mail and I will respond with the details from the restaurant. I can recognize the riverfront vaguely in the photo :-)

    -Corpo
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  • as far as the second pic goes, i'm sorry i don't have better info, but i seem to remember that being sand ~ not snow ~ by that telephone pole. it's either in reference to windstorms in CA or the hurricane in galveston, tx. i'm still googling for more specific info, tho.
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  • Now that's what I call snow... Nothing compared to the 15 centrimetres that have fallen here in Holland.
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  • Old school telephone pic...could swear it is from north dakota.
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  • The man next to the telephone pole - it is snow, not sand. Jamestown, North Dakota
    Photo Date: March 9, 1966 - http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/wea00958.htm
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  • The Japan picture is from Niigata Prefecture, Yuzawa, a ski-resort town. You can see a sign for Joetsu Kokusai in the background, which made me laugh. Jokoku is a pretty decent resort, been there four times or so and hoping to board there again this year. The snow in Niigata is usually half that size.
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  • Did anyone mention it is sunny and 75o Farenheit here in Phoenix Arizona this week end?
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  • You asked about the 2nd photo. References:
    * http://migolfer.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!A1E14A2D28802CCE!216.entry

    * http://nsidc.org/snow/gallery/blizzard_1966b.html


    "A man stands near a utility pole in North Dakota, March 9, 1966. A spring blizzard produced snow so deep that it nearly buried the utility poles. (Source: NOAA/Department of Commerce. Courtesy of the Historic National Weather Service Collection.)"
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  • Holy Crap! That's a lot of snow.
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  • i am an ice eater , so I hope if I can eat all this snow, I will solute this problems
    you have interested blog , I like cool ads, I wish if you visit me in some flowers/
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  • I can't believe the amount of snow seen in these pics, I have never realized how gentle is the weather here in switzerland....
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  • In our country there also is a lot of snow. Maybe not in such amounts as on pictures, but in meaningful way.
    Poland on snow
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  • Lots and lots of snow. :)
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  • I will never complain about our North East Ohio winters again!!!
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  • No. 2 - probably a scene of the winter of 1978/1979 in Poland.
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  • Whoa... now I don't feel like leaving Jamaica at all. So much ice, damn
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  • it's a widespread myth that picture no. was taken in Poland in 1979. Someone just has found it in the Net and put it up as a fake. Nevertheless we had two-metre high snowdrifts in Poland thirty one years ago and tunnels similar to that "snow walled-in"
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  • "Huge vintage snow fall (would like to get some info):" Looks a lot like a photo I have seen in reference to snow in North Dakota, perhaps near the Fargo area.
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  • (Vintage snow pic at top) A man stands near a utility pole in North Dakota, March 9, 1966. A spring blizzard produced snow so deep that it nearly buried the utility poles. (Source: NOAA/Department of Commerce. Courtesy of the Historic National Weather Service Collection.) Larger version (33k).
    http://nsidc.org/snow/gallery/
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  • I was in Honduras during Christmas and overheard that it had snowed for the first time in recorded history in... Guatemala! Upon research, however, i discovered that some volcanoes there get snow every once in a while.
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  • Preciosa imagenes me han gustado mucho, saludos desde Guareña-españa.
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  • strong winter doesn't mean that there is no global warming..wait till summer (besides temperatures are pretty high for a winter..it's just a lot of snow(rain) this year...
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  • Laura Ingals-Wilder recounts as a child back in the 1800's where there was a storm that came up to the second story bedrooms. So global warming must occur every so often, and of course there were a lot of carbon emissions back when the territories were just becoming states, right?
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  • hey, thats unbelivable. Very good shots
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  • I think that the "Huge Vintage Snowfall" photo may be from the winter of 77-78. I remember seeing it then.
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  • I'm pretty sure that first photo is of a doghouse, not a full-scale house. That much snow to scale with an actual two-storey would have caved in the roof.
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  • Someone should check out a place called Garrett County, Maryland USA. I have seen pictures taken there that compare to a lot of these pictures and they are south of the Mason-Dixon Line.
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  • I thought I hated snow before but I can't imagine living in that stuff.
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  • Cool pics, really! Being a Swede, I can tell you the last picture shows ski lift Tusenmetersliften in Åre, Scandinavia's greatest ski resort.

    Cheers.
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  • Where I ride my snowmobile in the Colorado Rockies they have over 200 inches and drifts normally are 3-10 feet after a Pacific front comes through. Taxi Driver in Arizona just doesn't get it......Oh Ya next week it is going to be sunny and 60 in Denver.....
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  • that wasn't a BMW :)
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  • Just moved from Alaska to Houston, Texas. Can't say I miss this kind of snow :)
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  • Don't want to be a smartass and all but Mercedes makes E-classes, BMW makes 5-series.
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  • Ah, this reminds me of the ice planet Hoth.
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