weird Archives - Page 18 of 24 - I Hate Working In Retail

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24 Experiences You Only Have At Asian Supermarkets

Only in an Asian supermarket

1. When you walk into one, you are met with a dangerously pungent mystery smell.

When you walk into one, you are met with a dangerously pungent mystery smell.

2. (That you can only blame on the unfortunate mixture of dried fish and durian fruit.)

(That you can only blame on the unfortunate mixture of dried fish and durian fruit.)

3. You’ve plucked “fresh” produce from cardboard boxes.

Or, if they’re slightly a more upscale establishment, plastic containers.

4. And it doesn’t even matter if they’re fresh. They’re ridiculously cheap.

And it doesn't even matter if they're fresh. They're ridiculously cheap.

5. You’ve had to stand idly by with the shopping cart as your mother expertly selects one bundle of bok choy over another.

You've had to stand idly by with the shopping cart as your mother expertly selects one bundle of bok choy over another.

6. You’ve seen it all and nothing fazes you.

7. Well…not always.

Well...not always.

8. You can purchase fine pottery in the same vicinity as live octopus and fermented duck eggs.

You can purchase fine pottery in the same vicinity as live octopus and fermented duck eggs.

9. But you have to maneuver those aisles carefully ‘cause you know the consequences.

But you have to maneuver those aisles carefully 'cause you know the consequences.

And they’re not playing.

10. You’ve witnessed a butcher dismember and package an entire duck in literally under 10 seconds.

11. You’ve watched your mother lift and sling a 70-pound bag of rice like a fucking champ.

You've watched your mother lift and sling a 70-pound bag of rice like a fucking champ.

(You’ve tried and struggled.)

12. You and your family have been buying the same groceries your entire life, and you still don’t quite know what they are.

You and your family have been buying the same groceries your entire life, and you still don't quite know what they are.

I don’t know what you call these, but when you sautée them, it’s fucking delicious.

13. You’re extremely grateful of establishments that have a slightly higher standard of order and cleanliness.

14. Because when it’s Saturday afternoon and all the families are out, it is every-man-for-himself anarchy.

Because when it's Saturday afternoon and all the families are out, it is every-man-for-himself anarchy.

As a kid, you were always assigned to watch the cart at HQ while your parents ran back and forth.

15. You used to watch the live crabs crawl all over each other and wonder how they haven’t figured out how to escape.

You used to watch the live crabs crawl all over each other and wonder how they haven't figured out how to escape.

16. You’ve accepted that presentation means nothing.

You've accepted that presentation means nothing.

17. Except those moments when they mean everything (and no one else around you quite notices or cares).

Except those moments when they mean everything (and no one else around you quite notices or cares).

18. You rarely need to exchange a single word with the cashier.

You rarely need to exchange a single word with the cashier.

No small talk here: strictly business.

19. And there is usually no scanner because they somehow know the prices of EVERYTHING OFF TOP.

24 Experiences You Only Have At Asian Supermarkets

AND THEY’RE JUST MANUALLY TYPING IT IN WITHOUT EVEN LOOKING AT THE PRICE STICKER. HOWWWWWWWWW.

20. But that’s OK: Your total will always be under $100, and you have a trunkload of food.

But that's OK: Your total will always be under $100, and you have a trunkload of food.

21. Somehow, to this day, most Asian supermarkets are still cash only.

Somehow, to this day, most Asian supermarkets are still cash only.

(But let’s be real: No matter how big, most stores still don’t want to pay that credit card processing fee.)

22. You and your family have been going to the same local grocer for years now, and you’ve accepted its quirks.

You and your family have been going to the same local grocer for years now, and you've accepted its quirks.

23. Because it has what you really want.

Because it has what you really want.

JUNK FOOD AISLE = CRACK.

24. And so much more.

And so much more.

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These are the world’s weirdest restaurants

There are some weirdest restaurants to dine in around the world from an aquatic eatery in the Maldives to a Nazi themed restaurant in Indonesia

This is the place to go if you are dead hungry.

A restaurant in Ahmadabad, India, has been built around an old graveyard .

The New Lucky Restaurant features tables scattered around real coffins from the cemetery on which the café was built.

Owner Krishan Kutti decided to preserve the graves rather than ripping them out to make way for his restaurant.

There are some equally weird places to dine around the world, from an aquatic eatery in the Maldives to a Nazi themed restaurant in Indonesia.

Here is a menu full of strange places to dine.

The Modern Toilet Restaurant

WikipediaModern_Toilet_Restaurant

Toilet humour: Could you eat your tea out of a toilet BOWL?

Lots of (public) convenience food at this Taiwanese restaurant where all the dishes come in toilet bowls.

When the restaurant was established the only thing on the menu was ice cream.

That’s right- they served chocolate ice cream in those bowls!

Twin Stars Diner

YoutubeTwin-Stars-Diner

Serving double: Twins at the Twin Stars Diner in Moscow serve the food

Walking into Moscow’s Twin Stars restaurant is like walking into a David Lynch movie.

The food may be run of the mill but the waiters and waitresses are all identically dressed twins.

Owner Alexei Khodorkovsky admits it’s been hard getting qualified twins.

Ithaa

Under the sea: Ithaa in the Maldives cost £3m to build and there are only 12 seats inside

The Maldives is one of the world’s most beautiful spots and this restaurant more than matches it.

Ithaa is set 16ft under the Indian Ocean in a large acrylic dome and you can watch the sea life as you eat.

It cost £3 million to build and only has 12 seats so book early.

The Heart Attack Grill

Wayne Parham

Death valley: The Heart Attack Grill in Las Vegas holds constant Man vs Food-type challenges

Americans supersize all their food which may account for their obesity epidemic.

But The Heart Attack Grill in Las Vegas celebrates the nation’s excess by making every dish a Man vs Food challenge.

Diners are given hospital gowns before tucking into the likes of a quadruple bypass burger, made with four beef patties and 20 slices of bacon.

Dinner in the Sky

22 Belgium Diners enjoying the high life
High meals: The Sky High restaurant in Belgium

Belgium isn’t noted for its magnificent scenery.

But they came up with the novel idea of winching 22 diners up in a crane to eat their food 150ft into the air.

Even weirder is that it has been such a success it is now available in 15 countries, including the UK.

Soldatenkaffee

GettySoldatenkaffe "The Soldiers' Cafe"

Little Germany: This restaurant may leave a bad taste in the mouth of some diners – it’s a Nazi-themed restaurant

Basil Fawlty once urged his staff at Fawlty Towers not to mention the war to two German diners.

But at the Soldatenkaffee in Bandung, Indonesia, it is at the top of the menu handed to guests by waiters wear Nazi uniforms and on the walls are photos of Hitler, stormtroopers and swastikas.

Owner Henry Mulyana was surprised at the outrage his restaurant caused.

Izakaya Kayabuki

If you pay peanuts you get monkeys.

Especially at Izakaya Kayabuki in Utsonomiya, Japan.

Owner Kaoru Otsuka uses his pet monkeys to serve guests at his restaurant.

The Attendant Cafe

Property prices are sky high in London.

Which may explain why developers turned a Victorian men’s public toilet into a fashionable cafe.

The Attendant Cafe, in West London, still features the original Doulton & Co 1890s porcelain urinals which have been converted into individual booths for people to sit at.

Hajime Restaurant

Sushi on conveyor belts has taken off around the world.

But will robot waiters?

Bangkok restaurant owner Lapassarad Thanaphant invested nearly £650,000 to purchase four dancing robots who serve diners Japanese food.

Le Refuge des Fondus

Le-Refuge-des-Fondus
Quirky food: At this restaurant in Paris wine is served in baby bottles

The French, and especially Parisians, have a reputation of being a little bit stuffy about their food.

But at Le Refuge des Fondus in Paris they inject a little fun into the proceedings.

Along with beef and cheese fondues they serve wine in baby bottles

Sourced from the dailymirror.com

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49 Products You’ll Never Look At The Same Way Again

1. The first lip balms were based on human ear wax.

2. Ikea products are actually named based on a system. Beds, for example, are named after places in Norway.

3. And it’s been estimated that 1 in 10 European babies is conceived in an Ikea bed.

4. The Quaker Oats man is named Larry.

5. The Cap’n Crunch guy’s full name is Horatio Magellan Crunch (and he isn’t really a captain).

6. Electric vibrators were invented over a decade before the electric iron and vacuum cleaner, because priorities.

7. A chemical originally found in human sperm is used to prevent wrinkles and therefore you can get a facial* with it.

8. The first commercial toilet paper was made from manila-infused hemp sheets, although people preferred to wipe with pages from the Sears catalogue instead.

9. “Skunked” beer isn’t caused by a change in temperature, but by a change in light exposure.

10. One of Sony’s first products was an electronic rice cooker.

11. And one of Sharp’s was a mechanical pencil, from which the brand took its name.

12. Chicken McNuggets come in exactly four shapes and they all have names: bell, bone, ball, and boot.

13. For a limited time, Canadian McDonalds are selling something called the McLobster.

14. Lysol used to be marketed as a feminine hygiene product.

15. And Kotex was originally manufactured as bandage material during World War I.

16. Amazon’s logo features an arrow pointing from A to Z to show that it sells everything from A to Z.

17. The best-selling products at Wal-Mart are bananas.

18. Clairol once manufactured a “Touch of Yogurt” shampoo.

19. And Colgate attempted to sell the world on “kitchen entrees.”

20. Pepsi A.M. was a valiant stab at creating a breakfast soda that never took off.

21. Pepsi was originally called “Brad’s Drink” after its founder, Caleb Bradham.

22. Wrigley’s Chewing Gum was the first product to feature a supermarket barcode, in 1974.

23. Texas Pete hot sauce is made in North Carolina.

24. Because it’s so processed, American cheese can’t actually be marketed as “cheese” and instead has to go by “cheese product” and the like.

25. Oreos don’t contain any dairy and are actually vegan.

26. Since white strips wouldn’t be invented for another two thousand years or so, ancient Romans used urine as a teeth-whitening agent.

27. WD40 is called that because it took the company 40 attempts to get the formulation (which stands for “Water Displacement”) right.

28. The inventor of Vaseline claimed to have eaten a spoonful of it every day.

29. Pam cooking spray is thought to be an acronym for “Product of Arthur Meyerhoff,” who was one of its inventors.

30. Q-Tips were originally called “Baby Gays.”

31. The formula for Silly Putty was originally concocted to provide synthetic rubber to the military.

32. Nutella was popularized during World War II because chocolate supplies were extremely limited due to rationing, and so the brand’s founder used hazelnut paste to make the supply last.

33. Cheerios were originally called Cheerioats.

34. Play-Doh began its life as wallpaper cleaner.

35. The man who invented the Pringles can was cremated and buried in one.

36. Nike shoes were first conceived on a waffle iron.

37. The first Apple logo featured Sir Isaac Newton.

38. The glue on the back of postage stamps (British ones, at least) contains 5.9 calories.

39. Barbie’s real name is Barbara Millicent Roberts.

40. Mattel briefly released Growing Up Skipper, a doll that grew breasts when you twisted its arm. The tagline was “She’s two dolls in one for twice as much fun!

41. Pizza Hut perfume is real.

42. Can openers weren’t invented until about 50 years after the invention of canned food, making them incredibly difficult to open in the meantime.

43. All of the letters in the word “typewriter” can be found on the same row on a QWERTY keyboard. (Same with “Alaska.”)

44. Mayonnaise can be used to suffocate head lice.

45. Pez dispensers were originally designed to look like cigarette lighters and marketed to encourage people to quit smoking.

46. Rogaine was originally meant to treat high blood pressure, before people noticed that its side effect was hair growth in men.

47. Starbucks’ Trenta-size cup is larger than the average adult human stomach.

48. And the coffee company is named for a character in Moby-Dick (although it was almost named “Pequod” after the whaling ship in the book).

49. Magnums have the same length and base circumference as regular condoms.

Sourced From Buzzfeed.Com