Mystery
It's Never A Mannequin
Picture this: you are walking along the busy streets of Chihuahua, Mexico. The shops are bustling, the air is loud with conversation, the breeze is dry as it rustles through your hair. You come upon the intersection of Ocampo and Victoria Streets and notice a large group of people peering curiously through a shop window. As you get closer you see that it is a bridal shop, and the crowd is admiring the gown displayed in the window. It’s a beautiful gown, but upon approaching, you realize that the dress is not what has everyone’s attention. It’s the woman wearing it. No, not a woman, a mannequin. Right? It must be a mannequin, there’s no way a model can stand that still. Yet, the hands, they seem so real, so detailed and soft. Store mannequins don’t have hands like that. As you move your gaze upward and take in the waxy face and exaggerated eyelashes you conclude: it must be a mannequin…but those eyes, they seem alive, and they seem to follow you as you move across the window to get a better look. A chill moves down your spine, despite the warm, dry air around you, as you can’t shake the feeling that what you are looking at is so much more than a mannequin display. You can’t shake the feeling that it’s a human. That you’re staring into the eyes of a corpse.
By Chelsea Adler4 years ago in FYI
The Death Of Vincent Van Gogh
On July 27, 1890, intellectuals and art lovers speculated for a long time in the sequence of events that day, which resulted in gunshot wounds to the abdomen. After a pioneer study of Pulitzer Prize-winner Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith, who first published his study of Van Gogh in 1890, the singer was shot by a man named Rene Secretan who presented his whole life (see Vicente Minnelli's Van Gogh film Lust for Life) (1956) the artist is shown in the forest around the French city of Auvers-Sur-Oise near Paris). Little is known about how he received the gunshot wound to his stomach in the 30 hours leading up to July 27. Some art historians believe that his death was the result of suicide, but there is no universal truth in this view.
By Jhakri Tharu4 years ago in FYI
The Disappearance Of Amelia Earhart
After landing in Laing, New Guinea, Earhart flew 1,500 miles [2,500 km] to Howland Island, a small island in the Pacific Ocean for burning, and Fred Noonan, his sailor. The plane returned three days later at Navy's Luke Field on Ford Island near Pearl Harbor aboard Earhart and Noonan and Harry Manning. Earhart's trip was to return to Laing Airfield in Howland, a 2,556-mile (2,200 mi, 4,100 km) journey.
By Jhakri Tharu4 years ago in FYI
Past can be changed!
Hello there! This article is going to be about a phenomenal phenomena which will blow your mind. One of my most preferred example I would take for this is that; One day you woke up, checked your mobile, and found that your social media platforms are not on your smartphone and when you ask your friends and family regarding the same; they shock you by replying back, "This app! We don't know about this app." But, the thing is that you have already used that app. Just think about this particular thought-provoking situation. Though, most probably it is not going to happen in reality and I hope that no one experience this kind of dilemma😜.
By Rahul Kumar4 years ago in FYI
Facts Over Myths
As you know seas cover more than 70% of the Earth. On average, the sea is 8 Empire State Buildings deep, and under 5% of its puzzling profundities have been investigated. It's even conceivable to discover lakes and waterways underneath the sea. They are denser than the remainder of the water encompassing them, so you can obviously see the difference. When the coral is in shallow waters, intense sunlight can harm the green growth living inside it. To ensure green growth, the coral produces a few proteins that act as some sort of sunscreen for it, so they don't actually have to burn through money on it. Alright, the vast majority of the sea may not be investigated, but what we do know is around 20 million tons of gold are scattered through its dim waters. It's amassed in tiny amounts, which is the reason it doesn't pay off to mine it. If we could take it out, each individual on the planet would get 9 pounds of gold. At the point when sharks need their morning joe, they go to a café as well. Back in 2002, analysts found an area in the Pacific sea called the White Shark Cafe, where incredible white sharks come during the winter. They basically hang out, make wisecracks and laugh at accounts of what number of people they've scared, and afterward return to the coast to unnerve us a little chomped more when the climate gets warmer.
By Jay Rathod5 years ago in FYI








