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A book dated from the 16th century full of weird religious drawings. Featuring a human–donkey–demon hybrid as one of its highlights. Babylonokia: A clay Nokia phone with cuneiform keys. Was once misrepresented as an actual artifact. Bliss (photograph) The most viewed photograph in all of human history is... the default wallpaper for Windows XP.
It is easy to enter from the top, but it is difficult to climb from the bottom to the top. There is a cliff where the incident occurred. The terrain is difficult to escape; in fact, a few days after the incident was discovered, a news media interview team who visited the site was unable to escape from the area and had to be rescued. [11] [6]
From October 2014 to September 2015 Shūkan Bunshun was the fourth best selling weekly magazine in Japan with a circulation of 680,296 copies. [5] As of 2023, the total number of copies sold has dropped to 165,794. [6] As a general-news magazine, Shūkan Bunshun ' s major competitor is the more conservative [2] [7] Shukan Shincho. [8]
No surprise, but 2021 made for 12 very strange months. These bizarre stories are the best weird news we reported on this year. The post The Best Weird Stories of 2021 appeared first on Nerdist.
' weekly magazine ') generally refers to weekly magazines published in Japan, including politically provocative weekly tabloid newspapers. As noted by Watanabe and Gamble in the Japan Media Review and in their book A Public Betrayed , the genre is "often described as bizarre blends of various types of U.S. magazines, such as Newsweek , The New ...
In the August 15, 1960 issue of The Province, a Canadian newspaper, the story was reported with some alterations.In an article titled "Man with his own country", the newspaper claimed that John Allen Kuchar Zegrus was "a naturalized Ethiopian and an intelligence agent for Colonel Nasser", and carried a passport "issued at Tamanrasset, the capital of Taured south of the Sahara".
Utsuro-bune.Manjudō, the strange boat drifted ashore on fief of Lord Ogasawara. Utsuro-bune (虚舟, hollow boat), also Utsuro-fune and Urobune, was an unknown object that allegedly washed ashore in 1803 in Hitachi province on the eastern coast of Japan.
Yomiuri also publishes the daily English-language newspaper The Japan News [34] (formerly called The Daily Yomiuri), established in 1955. [34] Besides its news website, [34] The Japan News also publishes a weekly e-paper. [35] It publishes the daily Hochi Shimbun, a sport-specific daily newspaper, as well as weekly and monthly magazines and books.