https://www.geek.com/comics/water-water-everywhere-in-new-twelfth-doctor-comic-1713374/?source

Doctor Who

Things get a bit icy for our comic book heroes when the Twelfth Doctor and Bill Potts encounter a pair of old foes in part two of Richard Dinnick’s “The Wolves of Winter.” […]

The post Water, Water Everywhere in New Twelfth Doctor Comic appeared first on Geek.com.

August 27, 2017

Water, Water Everywhere in New Twelfth Doctor Comic

https://www.geek.com/comics/water-water-everywhere-in-new-twelfth-doctor-comic-1713374/?source

Doctor Who

Things get a bit icy for our comic book heroes when the Twelfth Doctor and Bill Potts encounter a pair of old foes in part two of Richard Dinnick’s “The Wolves of Winter.” […]

The post Water, Water Everywhere in New Twelfth Doctor Comic appeared first on Geek.com.


August 27, 2017

Japan’s Ice Cream Katana is the Culinary Action Treat We’ve Always Wanted

http://nerdist.com/ice-cream-katana-japan-food-fight/

By many accounts, the history if ice cream goes back several centuries, and it remains one of the most popular deserts around the world. Many countries put their own spin on ice cream, but the latest creation out of Japan may be the most hardcore ice cream treat that we’ve ever seen. It’s an ice cream katana with a chocolate-covered cookie cross-guard!

Via Kotaku, Asahi Digital is reporting that the ingenious idea to create ice cream in the shape of a katana blade came from a high school student in the city of Seki in Gifu Prefecture. It’s especially fitting since the swordsmiths of Seki are renowned for their sword-making skills and their “high-quality kitchen cutlery.” As for the katana ice cream, they are made by a local confectionery chef and they appear to very popular creations.

So far, the katana ice cream only comes in bean paste or Japanese citron flavor, and it is only available in Seki. However, it’s such a great idea that we wouldn’t be shocked at all if it continues to expand across Japan and even to the United States at some point in the future. At least that’s what we’re hoping for! Because now that we know these exist, we want them badly.

What do you think about the katana ice cream blades? And which flavors would you like to see if they make it to the US? Share your delicious thoughts in the comment section below!

Image: Neku

More things!


August 27, 2017

Hurricane Harvey Is Now A Tropical Storm  

http://www.essence.com/news/hurricane-harvey-tropical-storm

This hurricane was one of the worst to hit the U.S. in more than a decade


August 27, 2017

This 1949 Chuck Jones Cartoon Makes the Case for Universal Healthcare

http://nerdist.com/this-1949-chuck-jones-cartoon-makes-the-case-for-universal-healthcare/

The next time you find yourself in a conversation with someone who insists the idea of government-funded healthcare in the U.S. is somehow a new idea, just let this 1949 Warner Brothers cartoon do most of the talking for you. Brought to our attention via an article on BoingBoing, this short, titled “So Much for So Little,” was produced by the U.S. government in 1949 and directed by cartoon legend Chuck Jones, famous for many of the most popular Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck cartoons. It went on to win an Academy Award in 1950 for Documentary Short Subject.

Along with being beautifully animated, the short is helpful to refute those pesky claims that universal healthcare is some sort of radical hippie idea cooked up in the last few years. The details of the concept as presented in the cartoon have, as you can imagine, changed over the years, particularly when it comes to the country’s infant mortality rate, common diseases that infants face, and the how smoking as a health hazard isn’t even mentioned.

Additionally, the final figure of “three cents a week” that the cartoon states can fund public healthcare would barely be a drop in the bucket in modern costs. Yet, Boing Boing cites a piece that states a 2009 Kingsepp study showed it would cost taxpayers $3.61 a week to fund the Affordable Care Act (in its form at the time). If there’s validity to those figures, we’re still pretty much at the “for less than a cup of [Starbucks] coffee a week” levels of taking care of every American citizen.

What do you think of the short? Think something like what’s proposed in it is still possible? Let’s discuss in the comments below!

Image: Academy Film Archive