Tuesday, April 08, 2014

La Isla de la Muñecas/The Island of the Dolls—the story of an island possibly haunted by sentient dolls

By Jack Brummet
Unexplained Phenomena Editor

Thanks to Jeff Clinton for the idea for this story.  The story originally appeared on All This Is That September 13, 2011.






South of México Distrito Federal (Mexico City) in the extensive network of Xochimilco canals, is a small island called La Isla de la Muñecas.  The Island of the Dolls is a seriously spooky place. 

The man who created the island of dolls—Don Julian Santana—often told visitors that he was haunted by the ghost of a little girl who drowned in one of the nearby canals.  That haunting, real or imagined, led him to eventually decorate almost every tree growing on the island with old and  mutilated dolls.  Most people who visit the island say that they have a feeling that they’re constantly being watched.

Although Don Julian was married, he abandoned his family and life and ended up living the last 50 years of his life as a hermit on his island, working on his strange project.

Some people say he would fish the dolls from the water because he though they were real children.  In fact, he was collecting and placing them around his home as a shrine and to assuage the spirit/ghost of the little girl that he thought tormented him. 

He grew vast amounts of fruit and vegetables in the lush gardens around his house, and, eventually, began to trade his fruit and vegetables for old dolls in hopes the dolls would form vehicles for spirits to keep the deceased girl company and prevent further evil from descending upon the island.  He would also often buy dolls and rummage through garbage dumps to find more dolls.

Local legend has it that Santana died under mysterious circumstances—that the spirit-inhabited dolls went Chucky on him.  Others people swear they have witnessed the dolls become sentient at night and that the dolls themselves have taken Santana's place as caretaker of their island.

In 2001, Don Julian Santana was found dead by his nephew in the same canal in which the little girl had drowned.  

As part of the World Heritage site of the islands and canals of Xochimilco, Santana's Island of the Dolls is now one of the world’s weirdest tourist attractions (visitors often bring more dolls). Some tourists who have visited the island claim that the dolls whisper to you [1], and that you must offer them a gift upon setting foot on the island. 

I've visited several World Heritage sites over the years.  This is the next one on my list.

[1]  This reminds me of another story I wrote about not long ago--the story of Robert The Sentient Doll (which also has a Chucky connection).  It is one of the ten most read stories on ATIT.   You can find that story here.













---o0o---

Monday, April 07, 2014

The Paul Winter Consort's "Icarus"

By Jack Brummet, Jazz Ed.

This is such a gorgeous song.  How often does a song so beautifully capture the whole story of its [one word] title?  You see Icarus soar and keep soaring, and then the dark part as the wax melts and the feathers fall away and the song fades out, like the doppler rings from his splash into the sea, radiating and dispersing into nothingness.


---o0o---

Sunday, April 06, 2014

Amazon.com's $5 album deals

By Jack Brummet, Music ed.


Whenever Amazon sends one of those "5$ albums on sale now" emails, I generally take the bait and go look. Of however many albums, there are usually two good to great ones and the rest are remainders, or sub-remainders. If Amazon was an actual bookstore, these would be in a rack on the street marked "free," kind of like the stained couch those people down the block set out on the street in the rain.

---o0o---

Saturday, April 05, 2014

All this is that visitors in the last 24 hours by world location


---o0o---

Killing time: Google auto-completes

Mona Goldwater, Social Mores Ed.

For no particular reason, while waiting for some things to process, I decided to run some random Google searches to see the autocomplete results.  Here are a few from this morning:












---o0o---

Friday, April 04, 2014

Fab new paintings by former President George W. Bush (with a link to his older ones)

By Jack Brummet, painting ed.

We wrote about Ex-President George W. Bush's painting last year.  Since then, he has produced a whole bunch of new canvases -- portraits of world leaders he knew and met with during his eight year occupation of the White House














Our article on President Bush's earlier paintings:

The complete (so far) painting oeuvre of George W. Bush (24 paintings and counting)

---o0o---

Wednesday, April 02, 2014

Mike Kelly's amazing composite airplane photograph

By Pablo Fanque, National Affairs Ed.


Wow! Mike Kelly of Pure Photo photographed every plane that took from LAX in an eight hour period. He then worked in Photoshop eight hours to amazingly combine them into one image. 

---o0o---

Poem: Waiting

By Jack Brummet


There is
no tomorrow

until we
get through

the day
after yesterday
---o0o---

Monday, March 31, 2014

Andy Warhol greets Pope John Paul II/a note on Andy's religion

By Mona Goldwater, Religions Ed.


No one really thought of Andy Warhol as being especially religious when he was alive.  He did, however, attend church regularly.

In an interview with Lee Radziwill, conducted by Warhol and Fred Hughes for the March 1975 Interview magazine, Andy talked about going to church regularly and taking communion "sometimes."


From the piece "Warhol at Home" in Sacred Monsters, Sacred Masters by John Richardson (published by Pimlico in England in 2001), page 247:


"To believe the envious Truman Capote, Andy was a Sphinx without a secret. In fact, he did have a secret, one that the kept dark from all but his closest friends: he was exceedingly devout - so much so that he made daily visits to the church of Saint Vincent Ferrer on the Upper East Side of Manhattan... Although famously thrifty, he was also secretly charitable. Besides giving financial support, he often spent evenings working in a shelter for the homeless run by the Church of the Heavenly Rest. It was not soppy social consciousness or guilt that prompted Andy's good works; it was atavism as personified by his adored and adoring mother, the pious Julia."
---o0o---