The Six Most Fascinating Drinking Rituals Around the World

The 6 o’clock Swill, Australia/New Zealand

Australian Drinking Ritual

During World War I, Australian and New Zealand bars started closing their doors at 6 PM to encourage men to spend time with their families. Naturally, the slang “6 o’clock swill” began to circulate as men would rush to get a drink after work before the bars closed. Needless to say, the closing time didn’t stick.

Snapsvisa, Sweden

Swedish Drinking Ritual

Snapsvisa is a traditional drinking song that precedes bouts of drinking the spirit “snaps.” The songs generally glorify drinking.

Gan Bei, China

Odd Drinking Ritual

In China, the drinking culture of Gan Bei is used to honor and respect guests. Translating as “empty the glass” in English, Gan Bei involves a series of toasts and shots with a large group of people.

Six Of The World’s Strangest Plants

Rafflesia Arnoldii

Rafflesia Arnoldii Exotic Plant

The largest flower in the world, this parasitic plant can bloom over three feet tall. Despite its alluring appearance, the plant exudes a pungent smell and has no leaves, stems or roots. The large center can hold six to seven quarts of water.

Rafflesia Arnoldii Flower Picture

Gigantic Rafflesia Arnoldii Next To Children

Rafflesia Arnoldii Photograph

Selaginella Lepidophylla

Chihuahuan Strange Desert Plant

Also known as Rose of Jericho, this impressive plant is native to the Chihuahuan Desert and has an amazing survival mechnanism. The desert plant can survive almost complete desiccation by curling into a tight ball during dry weather and unfurling when exposed to moisture.

Mimosa Pudica

Strange Mimosa Pudica Plant

The Mimosa Pudica is an extremely sensitive plant that reacts to the slightest stimulus including touch, warmth, wind or even a shake. The herb responds by collapsing into itself and then reopening a few minutes later. This sensitivity is a result of seismonastic movements, which are the result of water movement in and out of the cell.

Mimosa Pudica Photograph

Mimosa Pudica Plant Picture

11 Haunted Sites Around the World


Ghostly apparitions, disembodied voices, blood-curdling screams – step out of a fictional horror movie and into eleven real-life haunted sites from around the world.


Raynham Hall, England

Nestled in the countryside of Norfolk, England, Raynham Hall was built by Sir Roger Townshend and has been in the Townshend family for 300 years. It also houses the most famous photograph of a ghost, the Brown Lady. The photo was captured by Country Life magazine in 1936, and depicts a white figure descending stairs. Stories of a ghost haunting the Hall started in 1835 – when guests present at a Christmas party in the house described and sketched an apparition dressed in brown – and ran rampant throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s. The Brown Lady is said to be the ghost of Lady Townshend – second wife of Viscount Townshend – who is rumoured to have been locked up in the house by her husband.



The Myrtles Plantation, USA

Built in 1769, by General David Bradford, The Myrtles Plantation, in Louisiana, is home to at least twelve ghosts. Rumours abound that ten people were murdered at the Myrtles Plantation, though only one murder – that of William Winter, whose ghosts crawls up to the seventeenth stair where he died – is confirmed. The most famous ghost roaming the Plantation is that of Chloe, a slave who became the house owner’s mistress and was subsequently hanged for her adultery. Other ghosts cited on the premise include:

  • an Indian woman who was buried in the supposed Indian burial ground on which the house stands
  • a little girl who performs voodoo on sleeping patrons
  • the poisoned Woodruff family who leave handprints on the mirror
  • Civil War soldiers who supposedly died in the house
  • Though most of the stories aren’t verified, countless witnesses can attest to the paranormal activities in the house.



    The Tower of London, England

    Located on the North Bank of the River Thames, London, The Tower of London was constructed by William the Conqueror in 1078. The building has served various purposes over the centuries – armoury, prison, torture and execution room, treasury, royal residence, public records office – but currently holds the title as the most haunted site in London. The most famous ghost that roams the Tower is Anne Boleyn, who one of the wives of Henry VIII, and beheaded in the Tower in 1536. Her ghost has been spotted on several occasions, sometimes carrying her head under her arm. Other apparitions who haunt the expansive building include English monarch Henry VI, who was murdered inside Wakefield Tower, the “White Lady”, whose aroma wafts around her haunting place, and Margaret Pole, a woman who was hacked to death and screams throughout the tower with her executioner at her heel.



    Edinburgh Castle, Scotland

    Edinburgh Castle is a fortress that sits atop the volcanic Castle Rock, and was constructed 900 years ago as a military fortress. It is also one of the most haunted spots in Scotland, in the most haunted city in all of Europe, Edinburgh. Visitors to the castle have witnessed apparitions including Lady Janet Douglas of Glamis, who was burned at the stake for witchcraft, a phantom piper who got lost in the castle’s underground passages, a headless drummer, French prisoners, colonial prisoners from the American Revolutionary War, and even ghost dogs in the dog cemetery.



    The Rose Hall Great House, Jamaica

    The most famous house in Montego Bay, Jamaica, Rose Hall is a Georgian Mansion that was built in the 1770s. The paranormal activity that abounds in this house is credited to the legend of Annie Palmer, a black magician who arrived in 1820 and killed her three husbands, various lovers, and slaves. She was murdered in her sleep by a Voodoo priest, but was improperly buried on the plantation. Her ghost has been captured in various tourist photos as it roams the halls. Other ghostly manifestations in the house include hurried footsteps, whispers in the dungeon, faces in the mirror, babies crying, music, and tapping on the walls.



    The Whaley House, USA

    The Whaley House, in San Diego’s Old Town, was officially considered the most haunted place in the United States by the U.S. Commerce Department in the 1960s. The house was constructed in 1857 by Thomas Whaley, on a partial cemetery, and over the centuries accumulated numerous restless spirits. The spirits sighted include Whaley and his wife, Whaley’s daughter who appears like a realistic child, a thief Yankee, Jim Robinson, who was hanged on the site and the family dog, Dolly Varden, who licks bare legs of women.



    Poveglia, Italy

    Located between Venice and Lido, Poveglia is an entire haunted island uninhabited and off-limits to visitors. The rumoured history of the island leaves little doubt about why bell towers clang, and moans and screams echo from across the waters. Originally a self-governing island, over time Poveglia was used as a burial ground for victims of the plague, and accommodation for soon-to-be victims. Both dead and barely alive bodies were burned, buried or left to rot. Rumours also abound that a mental hospital was erected on the island in 1922, where a doctor performed gruesome experiments on his patient, before going crazy himself and jumping off the bell tower.



    Stanley Hotel, USA

    The Stanley Hotel in the Colorado Rockies is the hotel that inspired Stephen King’s The Shining, and is a popular destination for ghost hunters. Numerous ghostly encounters have been reported throughout the hotel including:

    • Ghosts of the original owners of the hotel, Freelan Stanley and his wife, roaming different areas, keeping an eye on admin tasks, playing the piano, dressed in formal attire
    • Disembodied voices and footsteps in the hallways and rooms
    • Ghostly faces, phantom children running in the halls
    • Impressions of bodies on the bed when the room was unoccupied



    Eastern State Penitentiary, USA

    At the height of its use, the Eastern State Penitentiary in Pennsylvania crammed 1,700 prisoners into cells, including the infamous Al Capone, in 1929. But as early as the 1940s, it was the unsettling spirits that started giving the guards and inmates trouble. Manifestations included evil cackling, shadowy figures, ghostly faces in cellblocks and eerie voices echoing the halls. It is also often reported that Al Capone was tormented by the spirit of James Clark, a man he murdered in the St Valentine’s Day massacre. The site was abandoned as a prison in 1971, and currently holds ghost tours instead.



    Ancient Ram Inn, England

    The quaint little Ancient Ram Inn in Gloucestershire plays host to numerous ghost-enthusiasts year-round. The Inn, built on a pagan burial ground in the 12th century, is the picture-perfect haunted house with its creaky floorboards, musty smells, chilly rooms and dimly lit hallways. Completing the imagery is the accompanying accounts of paranormal activity – ghostly residents including two demons (a succubus and incubus) and a witch, poltergeists, and orbs – and the knowledge that eight patrons had to be exorcised after their visit. The sinister history of the Inn, which includes murder, child sacrifices, pagan rituals and suicide, thoroughly explains the spirits present between the walls.



    Bhangarh Fort, India

    Located in Rajasthan, the ruins of Bhangarh Fort are the most haunted site in India. According to legend, a sorcerer cursed the palace after the beautiful Princess rebuked his advances. His final words cursed those inside the Fort to death and condemned the souls to be imprisoned in the palace for centuries. The whole town of Bhangarh was abandoned thereafter, and even the Indian Government has prohibited anyone to enter the area after sunset. Eerie voices echo from the Fort, restlessness grips anyone who enters the site, animals flee from the place at nightfall, and it is said that anyone who enters after nightfall, will not return.

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    Mamta is a writer living in Sydney, Australia who loves trawling the web for the bizarre, beautiful and obscure everything. Sometimes she finds inspiration on her Tumblr.

The 6 Most Tasteless Ad Campaigns


From the embarrassingly funny to the outwardly banned to the downright offensive, here is a list of the most tasteless ads from around the world.

Groupon Tibet Commercial

Groupon’s $2 million ad during this year’s Super Bowl takes the cake for its tasteless depiction of an international crisis. Featuring Oscar-winner Timothy Hutton, the ad makes light of the political unrest in Tibet as it promotes cheap deals on Tibetan curry. It was vilified far and wide, alienated millions of viewers and was, unsurprisingly, pulled from screens.

World Wildlife Fund Green Agenda [WARNING: Distressing images]

In 2009, a leaked billboard and accompanying video from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) made its way online. The ad promoted the green agenda by re-enacting the horrific 9/11 attacks in NYC, showing more planes aimed at the towers, and finishing on the slogan, “The tsunami killed 100 times more people than 9/11. The planet is brutally powerful. Respect it. Preserve it”. Apparently the ad was originally conceived by the Brazilian division and never meant to air. Needless to say, the ad sparked uproar, with even the WWF condemned it as tasteless and offensive.

Kotex ‘Beaver’ Commercial

In 2008, this Australian tampon commercial was heavily criticized for showing a young woman towing along her beaver (guess what that stands for?) during her day out. Though completely bizarre, a little painful to watch, and despite receiving over 200 complaints by viewers, authorities refused to ban it. Apparently they didn’t think a woman and her beaver were very threatening.

Banned Durex Condom Ad

A man being followed by an army of semen that trample him to reach his date but end up trapped in a giant condom instead? Not hard to see why this one was dubbed tasteless and subsequently banned. It’s part funny, part cringe worthy, and all kinds of wrong.

British Trident Gum

Relying on some truly offensive stereotypes – namely an incoherent diatribe by a man with a Jamaican accent – this British gum ad received over 500 complaints and was banned in 2007. The ads were deemed tasteless for promoting racism and ridiculing Caribbean people and their culture.

Thai Black Herbal Toothpaste

A giant black man towers over a young Thai girl, gracefully climbs a pole to retrieve her balloon, is shunned by the girl’s mother, sleeps on a giant toothbrush and turns into toothpaste, all to prove that looks can be deceiving. It’s pretty bizarre, utterly tasteless and was rightfully banned for its racial stereotyping.