Cats cannot taste sweetness AT ALL. (I guess that means that they have a “meat tooth” rather than a “sweet tooth.”)

Cats cannot taste sweetness AT ALL. (I guess that means that they have a “meat tooth” rather than a “sweet tooth.”)

When I cut into this onion, I discovered it was already well on its way to fulfilling its biological imperative of making more onions.
I think it looks like an owl.

So you know that UGLY statue of John Paul II they have outside Rome’s main train termnal?
You know, the one that looks like this . . . ?

I’ve blogged before about the UGLY John Paul II statue outside Rome’s main train terminal.
Now Catholic New Agency is reporting that an effort is underway to fix it:
“I made a design for the sculpture that wasn’t executed well in the foundry,” explained the creator of the artwork, Italian sculptor Oliviero Rainaldi.
“It is not that we have come up with a new statue,” he told CNA on Jan. 10. “We’re correcting those details that weren’t executed well” so that “it will be more faithful to my original idea.”
The redesign will involve replacing the head, modifying the Pope’s cape and touching up the outer coating of paint, since the bronze has oxidized to a light shade of green. The statue will also be raised 15 inches on a new platform, and its lighting will be improved.
. . .
Rainaldi told CNA in a June 2011 interview that his avant garde design is intended to manifest the inner-life of Pope John Paul II, instead of presenting a life-like photographic image.
“The man within was more interesting to me than the man outside,” he said, describing a man who was “lacerated” inside “not only by his infirmity but also by his mission,” the sculptor said. Rainaldi added, “this man showed he was beautiful for others reasons beyond his appearance.”
Color me skeptical, but it doesn’t sound to me like Rainaldi “gets it.”
If you want to make a John Paul II memorial homeless person shelter then make a homeless person shelter and slap a sign on it. Don’t make something that positively invites an internet caption contest.
Speaking of which . . . how would you caption this monstrosity?
This is the video Patrick Coffin and I were laughing about on today's Catholic Answers Live.
Credit for conceiving and making it goes to our engineer, Matthew Tuszynski.
And then there's this cold open from Sheep in the Big City (does anyone remember that show but me?)
It's 346 B.C. and King Philip II of Macedon (father of Alexander the Great) has just subjugated a bunch of Greek city-states.
He then approaches Sparta and sends them a message: "You are advised to submit without further delay, for if I bring my army into your land, I will destroy your farms, slay your people, and raze your city."
The Spartans reply: "If."
Saw this video linked on Kevin Knight's site (CHT: Kevin!) as "A chance encounter and shared moment with one of nature's greatest and most fleeting phenomena…"
Starts kinda slow (they weren't expecting the encounter they got, perhaps), and then WHAM!
Do yourself a favor: Watch it in full screen mode.
Murmuration from Sophie Windsor Clive on Vimeo.
Recently I've been having some physical therapy for a foot problem (nothing huge, just a pinched nerve), and the owners of the physical therapy facility have a space out back for their dogs, which they bring to work with them.
The dogs are very well mannered (no barking). Normally they are up and active in their area, but when I was in most recently they were resting, and I thought it made a cute photo.
Steve Greydanus tells me that the Lion King is back in theaters and doing well in 3-D. He's not impressed with it as a film, however.
Personally, I've never seen it, but I've been exposed to enough Disney advertising to find the following video hilarious.