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41 Cool Posts Shared Online You Don’t Want To Miss
Did you know that Australia is wider than the moon? Ok, that might not be everyone's idea of an interesting fact, but, fortunately, there are other options out there. Indeed, there are whole communities on the internet devoted to gathering cool stuff they’ve seen, heard or read and presenting them to their fellow humans.
So, we’ve gathered some cool examples of folks seeing something interesting and deciding to take a picture to share it online. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to add your own thoughts and stories to the comments section down below.
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This Is Beautiful
A Nurse Found Out That Her New Coworker Was The Same Premature Baby She Took Care Of Over 30 Years Ago. (1990)
When It's Cold Enough To See The Melody
Every day, tens of millions of people scroll through specialized web communities, forums, subreddits, Facebook groups, even Discord servers, linked by a shared interest in something that, to others, seems oddly specialized. From the community for discovering architectural "liminal spaces," identifying obscure insects, sharing stories about trivial revenge, collecting cursed thrift store finds, or trading skills for keeping fountain pens, these internet spaces are prospering.
Why do they do so well? Because it's something so out in the open, so human: our compulsion to gather around curiosity, to be seen in our strangeness, and to be part of something, even if that something is richly, intensely specific.
Tom Brown Was An Engineer Who Saved 1,200 Types Of Apples From Extinction Over 25 Years
Sabrina Chebichi Kenyan Athlete Who Won A Marathon In 1973 Barefoot And Wearing A Dress
Baby Raccoon Waits On Doorstep All Alone For Someone To Notice Him
What other people want varies wildly, and that's what makes the internet such fertile ground. One person might be interested in medieval cooking recipes; another person might like watching people restore old tools; someone else might have a very keen interest in learning about the editing of reality TV shows.
9 Year Old Maryland Girl Finds 15 Million Year Old Megalodon Tooth In The Chesapeake Bay
Jaden Smith Opens A Food Truck To Feed The Homeless
In Iraq's Book Markets, Books Are Left On The Street Overnight Because, As Iraqis Say, "The Reader Does Not Steal And The Thief Does Not Read"
Before, it might have felt isolating, something one has to do alone, or something that perhaps others won't understand. On the internet, though, people find groups where their strange little pastime is not only not rebuffed but welcomed. There's pleasure in belonging to a community where nobody bats an eyelid when you share a macro-image of a moth from your garage or go off on a ten-paragraph rant about the significance of a cutscene in a video game.
Looks Like A Complete Another Planet.
The Dragon Head Mountain In South Sinai, Egypt. The Red Glow In The ‘Eye’ Is A Camp Fire In The Cave
My Wife And I Sent A Wedding Invite To Pope Francis For Fun When We Were Engaged And This Was The Vatican’s Response
These communities succeed because they provide something beyond content, they provide context, feedback, and acknowledgement. Posting in a community of shared interest is not broadcasting into the void of your average social media stream, where people may scan past or silently critique. There, you're talking to people who *get it*. They know what it is you're talking about when you say a kitchen "feels haunted but not in a bad way."
The Evolution Of This Building Can Be Seen In It's Masonry
Safety Pin Hasn't Changed In 175 Years
Getting Promoted As A Garbage Man Enough Times In New York City Gets You A Dress Like A Military General
They'll upvote your exhaustive spreadsheet of diverse types of apple. They'll ridicule your ghost cake selfie or bawl with you over a sentimental recollection shared in an oldies thread. It's like entering a room where everybody speaks your dialect, however arcane that dialect happens to be.
On March 11, 2002, 15 Young Girls Died In A Fire At Their Mecca School
They could’ve escaped, but the Saudi Religious Police prevented Civil Defence Officers from entering because they weren’t wearing proper ‘Islamic’ clothes.
Abandoned Church That Was Turned Into A Skate Park
A Moth Caterpillar
There is the implicit guarantee in the shape such communities take. Most of them have some guidelines, no spam, on topic, and be civil. This provides a sense of security and structure in contrast with chaos of the broader internet. There is a rhythm to popping by: viewing what's new, responding to others, contributing your own words.
Ivana Bacik Speaks While Holding Up Meme Of Us Vp Jd Vance In Irish Parliament
Tobacco Company Ceos Declare, Under Oath, That Nicotine Is Not Addictive (1994)
This Church In Belgium Was Converted Into A Rock Climbing Gym
Over time, these behaviors build more than a hobby space, they build relationships. Members get to know each other's nicknames, there are jokes that develop from inside knowledge, and members build a sense of group identification. Even if you’re just lurking, there’s a feeling of belonging.
Tokyo Hospital Sued By Truck Driver Who Discovered He Was Switched With A Poor Single Mother's Baby In 1953
The World’s Oldest Customer Complaint Was Written On A Clay Tablet 3,700 Years Ago
Where a man named Nanni angrily called out a copper trader, Ea-nāṣir, for selling him low-quality goods. Tablet on display in the British Museum:
'Fight Club' Booed At 1999 Venice Film Fest
Another layer of appeal comes from the combination of low stakes and h**h engagement. In daily life, talking about your interest in taxidermy or antique vending machines might feel awkward or indulgent. But online, where everyone opted in, the barrier is gone. You’re free to dive deep. These pages also become channels for creativity: someone can make genealogy memes, write a fanfic with extinct animals, or do lovely sketches of plant diseases. The sheer creativity that exists in these communities is unbelievable, and seeing other individuals genuinely care about something is infectious, even if you didn't initially have an interest.
Rubin Observatory In Chile Has Discovered Over 4000 New Asteroids Since Coming Online A Week Ago
What Prison Cells Look Like In Different Countries
19-Year-Old American Pilot Detained In Antarctica After Unauthorized Landing During Solo Flight Across All Seven Continents
It's something more than entertainment. These communities meet emotional needs: the need to connect, to be curious, to wonder at the strange and beautiful edges of the world. They remind us that fascination doesn't have to be useful in order to be valid. You don't have to be an expert. You don't have to have a reason to care. The loveliness of online communities is that they revel in *that*, untainted, simple joy about finding something great and sharing it with others who will twinkle along with you.
In 2002, Two Planes Collided Mid-Air In Germany After Conflicting Air Traffic Control Instructions, K*****g All On Board
Two Years Later, In 2004, A Man Who Lost His Family In The Crash Tracked Down The Controller And Fatally Stabbed Him At Home.
Bootleggers In 1920s Seattle Invented “Heifer-Heels” - Shoes That Made Their Footprints Look Like Cow Tracks So Cops Couldn’t Follow Them During Prohibition
The Cave Of The Swimmers Features 8,000-Year-Old Depictions Of Human Figures Seemingly Floating Or Swimming In The Middle Of The Sahara Desert
So whether it's a community for Victorian mourning jewelry, time-lapse weather maps, or cats resembling celebrities, these spaces are important. They demonstrate that no subject is too niche, too weird, or too obnoxious to generate community. In a loud, polarized online world, these soft spots of mutual curiosity are a testament that connection doesn't always require debate or drama, it often starts with a basic post and someone else being like, "Wow, me too."
