Fernando Livschitz

Fernando Livschitz

Uplifting, dream-like and fun, Argentine film-maker Fernando Livschitz transforms footage of everyday scenes into charming and mind-boggling fantasy.

Fernando Livschitz of Black Sheep Films edits everyday footage in order to add a touch of the bizarre to mundane scenes. “I try to put a smile on people’s faces. I believe it’s always possible to show the world and ideas in an alternative way, with magic and surprise. As a director I like to express my point of view through creative thinking.” Music: Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World” covered by Reuben and the Dark.

https://www.bsfilms.me/#new-page-1

Bromelain From Pineapple

Bromelain From Pineapple

A peer reviewed laboratory study found that bromelain, a proteolytic enzyme complex derived from pineapple, caused dramatic death of gastric cancer cells and chemotherapy resistant colon cancer cells in vitro, reducing viability by roughly 90 to 99 percent while activating multiple apoptosis pathways such as caspase activation, PARP cleavage, cytochrome c release, and suppression of survival signals including the Akt pathway and Bcl2 and MUC1 oncoproteins, findings that highlight bromelain’s mechanistic anti tumor potential but still require human clinical trials before any treatment claims can be made.

Drop Bear

Drop Bear

So you know how drop bears are usually just an Aussie rite-of-passage prank for tourists? Well the Australian Museum went full deadpan and made a straight-faced “fact sheet” style page about them, complete with a fake scientific name and all.

And the best bit is they don’t just describe the “animal” — they also slip in a proper “practical advice” section, like you’re about to head into the bush and need a safety briefing.

According to the museum-style advice, there are “folk remedies” people reckon repel drop bears… including classics like forks in your hair or toothpaste behind the ears. Written seriously. Like it’s sunscreen guidance.
That’s what makes it peak Australian humour: not just “haha gotcha” — it’s institution-level commitment. A whole museum basically backing the bit with the straightest face possible.

So next time a tourist asks if drop bears are real, you can hit them with:
“Mate… the museum has notes.”

Castor Oil Packs

Castor Oil Packs

You have unexplained skin breakouts that no dermatologist can pin to food or hormones. Or chronic lower right abdominal discomfort. Or you detox — juice cleanses, fasting — and feel worse instead of better. You feel like your body is holding onto toxins it can’t process.

This happens because the lymphatic system — the waste-removal network that runs parallel to your circulatory system — has no pump. Unlike blood, which the heart pumps automatically, lymph fluid moves only through muscle contractions and breathing. When lymph flow becomes sluggish from sedentary living, chronic inflammation, or hormonal disruption, cellular waste, hormones, and immune complexes accumulate in the tissue rather than being filtered through the lymph nodes and liver.

Ancient Egyptians applied warm castor bean oil compresses to the abdomen for “liver and bowel cleansing.” Ayurvedic texts from 1500 BC describe “Eranda” (castor oil) as the supreme liver and lymphatic detoxifier. In America, the sleeping prophet Edgar Cayce prescribed castor oil packs in over 1,000 documented readings between 1900-1945. The medical establishment ignored it for 80 years. In 2023, a randomized trial at McMaster University measured what Cayce claimed: castor oil packs placed over the liver area significantly increased secretory IgA — the primary immune antibody produced in the gut lining — within 24 hours.

The Lymphatic Pump Activator
Castor oil’s active compound — Ricinoleic acid (90% of its fatty acid composition) — is unique in nature. When absorbed transdermally through the thin skin of the abdomen, Ricinoleic acid binds to EP3 prostanoid receptors in the smooth muscle of lymphatic vessels and the intestinal wall. This binding triggers rhythmic contractions of the lymphatic vessel walls — essentially creating a mechanical pump where none existed. The liver, which sits directly under the application area, increases bile production in response to the ricinoleic acid signal, accelerating the export of fat-soluble toxins, estrogen metabolites, and inflammatory byproducts.

The McMaster study specifically measured secretory IgA — an increase indicates the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) is being stimulated, improving immune surveillance of the intestinal tract.

Protocol:
• Get 100% pure cold-pressed castor oil (hexane-free) and a piece of unbleached flannel or cotton cloth.
• Saturate the cloth with castor oil — enough to be moist but not dripping.
• Place directly on the upper right abdomen (liver area)
• Cover with plastic wrap, then place a heating pad or hot water bottle on top.
• Lie down for 45-60 minutes before bed — deep breathing accelerates lymph drainage.

Do this 3-4 nights per week for 30 days

Day 1: warmth and relaxation.
Week 2: skin clarity improves.
Day 30: hormonal acne reduced, digestion improved.

Source: Journal of Naturopathic Medicine — “Castor oil packs and secretory IgA: randomized pilot study.”

Olive – Tree Of Life

Olive - Tree Of Life

Noah’s dove came back carrying an olive branch. Ancient Greeks crowned their champions with olive wreaths. The Bible mentions the olive tree more than any other plant — over 100 times across the Old and New Testaments. And in December 2025, researchers published a study showing that olive leaf extract kills human leukemia and lymphoma cells in controlled laboratory conditions. The tree humanity has considered sacred for 6,000 years keeps giving science reasons to agree.

The olive tree (Olea europaea) has been a symbol of peace, victory, and divine blessing across virtually every Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilization. But the leaves — the part almost no one eats — contain one of the most pharmacologically active polyphenols in the plant kingdom: oleuropein.

The December 2025 Discovery
A study published in Frontiers in Oncology (December 2025) investigated the anti-tumor effects of Olive Leaf Extract (OLE) against human acute leukemia and lymphoma cells in vitro. The results were striking: OLE significantly reduced cancer cell viability, induced apoptosis (programmed death), and downregulated four cancer-protective proteins simultaneously — HSP-60, HSP-70, SOD2, and Thioredoxin-1.

These heat shock proteins (HSP-60, HSP-70) are abundantly expressed in cancer cells and act as survival shields — they suppress apoptosis, promote angiogenesis, support metastasis, and help cancer cells escape immune detection. By downregulating them, OLE removes the armor cancer cells hide behind.

What oleuropein does that nobody expected
Earlier studies established that oleuropein induces apoptosis in breast cancer cells — including triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), the most aggressive and treatment-resistant subtype, with virtually no effective targeted therapies available. A 2025 study confirmed oleuropein’s dual action: not only does it kill TNBC cells, it inhibits cell motility — meaning it interferes with the cancer’s ability to migrate and metastasize to other organs. This anti-metastatic effect was observed at low concentrations, making it particularly significant for functional food-based prevention strategies.

The full tumor spectrum documented
Comprehensive reviews confirm oleuropein and hydroxytyrosol (another olive polyphenol) have documented anti-tumor activity against: breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, colorectal cancer, skin cancer, melanoma, glioblastoma (brain tumor), neuroblastoma, prostate cancer, and now acute leukemias and lymphomas. Across all these cancer types, the same selective mechanism was observed: oleuropein kills cancer cells while sparing healthy cells — the holy grail of oncological pharmacology that synthetic chemotherapy still struggles to achieve.

What makes the olive leaf different from olive oil
Olive oil contains minimal oleuropein — it’s mostly converted to other compounds during pressing. The highest concentration of oleuropein is in the leaves — the part discarded in olive oil production. The Mediterranean populations who lived longest and had the lowest cancer rates weren’t just eating olive oil. They were also drinking olive leaf tea — a practice documented in Greek, Italian, and North African traditional medicine for over 3,000 years.

VITALSHOTS PROTOCOL:
Olive leaf extract standardized to 20-25% oleuropein: 500-1,000mg daily with food. For cardiovascular and antiviral effects, lower doses (250-500mg) are documented effective. For anti-inflammatory and immune support: olive leaf tea (3-4 dried leaves per cup, steep 10 minutes) — the original form used across Mediterranean civilizations for millennia. Look for extracts from Olea europaea leaves specifically — not fruit, not oil — with certified oleuropein percentage on the label.

Sources:
PMID: 41515132 | OLE Anti-Tumor Hematologic Leukemia Lymphoma In Vitro December 2025
PMC: 12787448 | Olive Leaf Extract Cancer HSP SOD2 Thioredoxin Downregulation Full Study
PMC: 9409738 | Oleuropein Anti-Cancer Comprehensive Review — Apoptosis, Anti-Proliferative, Anti-Angiogenic
FFHDJ (March 2025) | Oleuropein Apoptosis Triple-Negative Breast Cancer TNBC Cell Motility Inhibition

Trench Composting

Trench Composting

Trench composting lets you skip the compost bin entirely and feed your soil directly where plants will grow, and it is one of the lowest-effort fertility methods a vegetable gardener can use.
The method is straightforward. You dig a trench about 12 inches deep down the center of a raised bed or garden row, layer in organic kitchen and garden waste, cover it with soil, and let it break down in place over several weeks. The decomposing material feeds soil microbes and worms directly in the root zone, which is exactly where you want that activity happening.

This image shows the layering approach well. Straw goes in first as a carbon base, then kitchen scraps like banana peels, eggshells, vegetable trimmings, and coffee grounds, then torn newspaper for additional carbon, then a covering of finished compost or garden soil to close it out. That alternating pattern of carbon-rich browns and nitrogen-rich greens is the same principle behind a traditional compost pile, just done underground.

Crushed eggshells are worth adding generously here. They break down slowly and release calcium, which helps prevent blossom end rot in tomatoes and peppers grown in the same bed the following season.

The trench method works on a rotation. Dig your trench in one third of the bed this season, plant on top of last season’s trench, and leave the third you planted last year fallow or in a cover crop. Rotate each year and the entire bed gradually improves.

One thing to avoid: do not add meat, dairy, or cooked food scraps to an in-ground trench. They attract rodents and break down anaerobically, which creates odor and can introduce pathogens. Stick to raw fruit and vegetable waste, coffee grounds, crushed eggshells, straw, and plain paper products.

The dark, crumbly soil mounded alongside this trench is a good sign of what this method produces over time.

9 Crops Needing Pruning

9 Crops Needing Pruning

A little strategic trimming goes a long way in the vegetable garden. Most fruiting crops pour energy into leaves and stems unless you step in and redirect that growth toward the harvest.

Here are nine plants that reward regular pruning with bigger, more consistent yields all season.

1. Tomatoes — snap off suckers between the main stem and branches every week to keep energy focused on fruit production
2. Peppers — pinch the first growing tip once the plant is 8-10 inches tall to trigger branching and heavier fruit set
3. Basil — clip the top growth weekly right above a leaf pair to prevent flowering and force bushy side growth
4. Zucchini — cut away the oldest lower leaves regularly to improve airflow and reduce powdery mildew pressure
5. Cucumbers — trim the first 4-5 side shoots on the lower stem so the plant channels strength upward into its main vine
6. Eggplant — limit the plant to three or four main branches by removing extra shoots at the base early in the season
7. Pumpkins — pinch off vine tips once two or three fruits have set so the plant stops running and puts everything into sizing up
8. Brussels sprouts — snap off the very top of the stalk about a month before your expected harvest to push the sprouts into full maturity
9. Okra — strip lower leaves as the stalk climbs to improve air circulation and make pods easier to spot and pick

Doing The Right Thing

Doing The Right Thing

Reese Werkhoven and his roommate Lara Russo were sitting on their recently purchased couch one night in April 2014, watching a Harry Potter movie, when the cushions started bothering him enough to do something about it. The couch was lumpy. It had been lumpy since they bought it at a Salvation Army store in New Paltz, New York, a month earlier for twenty dollars. He unzipped one of the cushions to see what was making it uncomfortable and found a small package wrapped in bubble wrap.

He later described his first thought: it might be drugs, it might be money, they were getting scared about it.

It was money.

He and Russo called their third roommate Cally Guasti in, and the three of them started finding more. Envelopes, one after another, tucked inside the cushions and inside the arms of the couch. They piled everything on a bed and counted it. The total was $40,800.

Their neighbours heard the shouting from their apartment and assumed someone had won the lottery.

The three of them spent several days discussing what to do. They had real conversations about the moral question, and they admitted later that they considered keeping it. They were in college or recently graduated. None of them had much money. Forty thousand dollars was a life-changing amount. One of them said later that there were a lot of gray areas to consider.

Then Guasti found a bank deposit slip inside one of the envelopes with a woman’s name on it.

Werkhoven called his mother for advice. She tracked down a phone number and texted it to him. He called the number, heard an elderly woman answer, and hung up. He called back and told her he had found something that he thought might be hers. She told him she had a lot of money in that couch and that she really needed it.

He drove with his roommates to her home the next day.

The woman, who has asked to remain anonymous, was 91 years old.

She was a widow with a recently broken hip. Her family had donated the couch to the Salvation Army while she was in hospital, not knowing what was inside it. The money was decades of savings — including wages from years of work as a florist — that she had been hiding in the couch at the encouragement of her late husband, who had worried about what would happen to her after he was gone. She had slept on that couch for years. When her back problems became serious, her family replaced it with a bed and the couch went to the charity shop.

She cried when the three roommates handed her the money.

She told them that it was her husband looking down on her, and that this was supposed to happen.

She gave them a reward of one thousand dollars. They kept the couch.

The three of them — Werkhoven, Guasti, and Russo — were college students and recent graduates in upstate New York who bought a secondhand piece of furniture because they needed somewhere to sit. What they ended up with was the specific knowledge that when it actually cost them something, they did the right thing.
Werkhoven said simply: it’s not our money. We didn’t have any right to it.

Guasti said, “At the end of the day, it wasn’t ours.”

There is nothing more to add to that.

Share this with someone who needs a reminder today that ordinary people make extraordinary choices all the time, without cameras or applause, because it is simply what you do.

Weird Wonders and Facts