Thursday, October 9, 2025

There's a wedding gown store in Chihuahua, Mexico, with a mannequin that become infamous — and the reason is positively chilling. On display since the 1930s, La Pascualita became notorious because some believe that she's not a mannequin at all, but an embalmed body. Local legend states that she was once the daughter of the store's owner and that the owner decided to preserve her corpse after her daughter died tragically on her wedding day.
It's true that La Pascualita is hyperrealistic. Her fingernails look human, and one store employee claimed that she even has varicose veins on her legs. Others have suggested that La Pascualita's eyes follow customers around the store, and one rumor claims that a French magician used to be able to "bring her to life" at night.
Go inside the eerie legend of La Pascualita, Mexico's "corpse bride" mannequin: https://inter.st/2jc8

 

“Child with teeth”. This little loop was created from Aleksandra Waliszewska’s painting. The painting was used as an illustration for a book “Upiór” by Łukasz Kozak.

 

Hellmouth. Based on an illumination from "The Hours of Catherine of Cleves" (ca. 1440)
Return of the Skinny Monster. The animation created entirely from public domain materials. Based maily on the engraving "Artisans and Death" by Rudolph Meyer, 1650. Background elements from the "First view of the Baths of Caracalla" by Hieronymus Cock, 1551. Original prints from Rijks Museum
Holbein's drum. Based on an engraving from "The Dance of Death" by Hans Holbein (1497-1543)

a trip | feat. Aleksandra Waliszewska



Monday, October 6, 2025

The Full Harvest Moon will occur on October 6, 2025 at 11:48 p.m. Eastern Time. This is the first of three supermoons in 2025, making it the largest and brightest full Moon of the year.

 












Sunday, October 5, 2025

“My next great adventure, aged 90, is going to be dying. There’s either nothing or something. If there’s nothing there’s nothing, that’s it. If there’s something, I can’t think of a greater adventure than finding out what it is. I happen to think there is something because of the experiences I’ve had, because of experiences other people have had. Very powerful ones.”

~ Jane Goodall


 

Saturday, October 4, 2025


 
Edward Raymond "Eddie" Cochran (October 3, 1938 – April 17, 1960)
Cochran's rockabilly songs, such as "C'mon Everybody", "Somethin' Else", and "Summertime Blues", captured teenage frustration and desire in the late 1950s and early 1960s. He experimented with multitrack recording and overdubbing even on his earliest singles, and was also able to play piano, bass and drums. His image as a sharply dressed and good-looking young man with a rebellious attitude epitomized the stance of the 50s rocker, and in death he achieved an iconic status. Cochran was born in Minnesota and moved with his family to California in the early 1950s. He was involved with music from an early age, playing in the school band and teaching himself to play blues guitar. In 1955, he formed a duet with the guitarist Hank Cochran (no relation), and when they split the following year, Eddie began a song-writing career with Jerry Capehart. His first success came when he performed the song "Twenty Flight Rock" in the film The Girl Can't Help It, starring Jayne Mansfield. Soon afterwards, Liberty Records signed him to a recording contract. Cochran died aged 21 after a road accident, while travelling in a taxi in Chippenham, Wiltshire, during his British tour in April 1960, having just performed at Bristol's Hippodrome theatre. Though his best-known songs were released during his lifetime, more of his songs were released posthumously.
In 1987, Cochran was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Cypress, CA.

A clean-cut Charles Manson on his wedding day in 1955.
This photograph captures Charles Manson as a young man on his wedding day in 1955, long before his name became synonymous with violence and cult manipulation. Dressed neatly in a suit beside his bride, he appears the picture of normalcy. Yet behind this image lay a troubled youth marked by crime, reform schools, and instability.
The marriage was one of Manson’s early attempts to establish a conventional life, but it proved short-lived. Within a few years he would be imprisoned again, setting him further down the path that would ultimately culminate in his notorious role as the leader of the so-called Manson Family in the 1960s.
This image is haunting not because of what it shows, but because of what history would later reveal. It stands as a reminder that even the most ordinary scenes can conceal the beginnings of far darker legacies.
Added fact: Manson married a woman named Rosalie Jean Willis, but while she was pregnant with their child, he was arrested for auto theft and sent to prison, ending the marriage soon after.