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TJKrew rated 10 months ago- The Daily Grail is described by boingboing (which links to an interview with proprietor Greg Taylor) as "a wonderfully strange blog covering anomalous phenomena, the occult, and high weirdness of all stripes."
There's certainly a plenty to entertain and mystify. If you've run ...
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21 Reviews
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 EyesWideOpen111 rated 8 weeks ago- 2. The Daily Grail - http://dailygrail.com/ THS comment > From the other side of our planet (Aussies run this) comes this absolute gem of a website with up to 20 daily described links - similar to Fark meets the Anomalist.com -- described links, written intelligently. Almost all the sites listed here could keep you busy for hours and this is no exception. Here's a sample link -- perhaps the best `example link' on this listing -- http://metgat.gaia.com/blog/2008/7/awesome_phenomena_at_the_saturday_night_club
 NelsonJones rated 10 months ago- Essential antidote to conventional news sources
 pootlesuzie rated 16 months ago- there is stuff here that is good and weird and cool and wacky and plain deranged - enjoy
Quote of the Day:
This is my simple religion. There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; the philosophy is kindness.
Dalai Lama
 aliasinkhorn rated 4 months ago-
My secret retreat that sates my curiosity for things, events and people out of the mainstream.
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 JillWelch327 rated 12 months ago- Interesting Website - Science, Magick, Myth and History
 Ajagsfairy rated 15 months ago- interesting stuff
 AtheneCuniculari rated 5 months ago- A little digging unearthed some gems. Worth spending a little time on!
 TJKrew rated 10 months ago- The Daily Grail is described by boingboing (which links to an interview with proprietor Greg Taylor) as "a wonderfully strange blog covering anomalous phenomena, the occult, and high weirdness of all stripes."
There's certainly a plenty to entertain and mystify. If you've run across the excellent Sub Rosa (PDF) magazine before, this is their daily news site.
While you're at it, you might have a look at the neon expanse of Reality Sandwich. There you might learn, for example, of a conversion of Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" into morse code, which was bounced off the moon, and reconstituted complete with the resulting "moon edits". Imaginative!
Or, maybe you'd prefer this lengthy essay, mulling our shaky financial future, by Daniel Pinchbeck.
 antdav rated 17 months ago-
An interesting web site
 sudio rated 24 months ago- Always a good read.
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