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Van Gogh Museum Pulls Pokémon Cards After Frenzy

The museum in Amsterdam stopped giving out Pikachu cards that were part of a special collaboration after extreme demand.

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The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam stopped giving out Pokémon cards inspired by the Dutch artist after fans of the game caused a frenzy in the gift shop and resellers positioned themselves outside the building.

The special cards featured an image of Pikachu, the beloved mascot of the Pokémon universe, in a felt hat and painted in the style of Vincent van Gogh’s 1887 work “Self-Portrait With Grey Felt Hat.” To obtain them, fans must now go on eBay — where they can cost as much as $620.

The cards were part of a collaboration between the museum and Pokémon Company International to celebrate the museum’s 50th anniversary and recognize the link between van Gogh and Japanese art and culture. The museum also displayed paintings of Pokémon, including Pikachu and Snorlax, which were dispersed among van Gogh’s self portraits and famous sunflowers.

To get one of the special cards, ticket holders had to complete a scavenger hunt in the museum, walking by van Gogh classics as well as Pokémon-inspired pieces of art. Every person who completed the hunt received a card. Until Oct. 13, that is.

“As a result of recent incidents during which a small group of individuals created an undesirable situation,” Lisette van den Brink, on behalf of the museum, said by email, “we have had to make the difficult decision to no longer make the special Pikachu x Van Gogh Museum promo card available in the museum.”

The collaboration was aimed at attracting new audiences to the museum. But what the institution did not foresee was chaos.

Footage that circulated on social media showed a frenzy in the gift shop as people lined up to get the cards, and resellers gathered outside.

“It was chaotically busy,” said Nikki Meijer-Vosters, a lifelong Pokémon fan and collector who visited the museum recently and partook in the scavenger hunt with her husband and son. They each got a Pikachu card. She said that it was noticeable that the museum was full of people who were there only to see the Pokémon art and leave with the special card.

After she left the museum, Ms. Meijer-Vosters said, people outside offered her money for the cards. She refused their offers and instead took the cards home and placed them in a special folder with her collection of other Pikachu cards.


Demand for Pokémon trading cards has been on the rise in recent years, and it shot up during the pandemic.

The Van Gogh Museum is not the first institution to experience turmoil as a result of the cards. In 2021, Target temporarily suspended sales of the cards over a threat to the safety of its customers and workers.

Rare cards have sold for astronomical prices reaching into the hundreds of thousands. Last year, the YouTuber Logan Paul broke a record by spending more than $5 million on one.

The Pokémon card game, first released in 1996, is a strategy game that allows players to battle one another using the characters of the wider Pokémon franchise.

Pokémon — short for pocket monsters — catapulted back to popularity in 2016 with the release of Pokémon Go, a mobile game in which players catch and train characters using augmented reality. The game brought people outside and caused some chaos and security scares.

Ms. Meijer-Vosters, the Pokémon fan who left the museum with three cards, lives in the town of Hilvarenbeek in the southern part of the Netherlands. She said she had been a fan of Pokémon since she was a young child and started collecting the cards.

“Now, as an adult, I can pass it on to my little one,” she said. “There’s nothing better.”
 
Who'd a thunk it? A behavior shared between Amphibian and Simian Females...

How Female Frogs Fight Off the Mating Ball

They pretend they’re dead and use a variety of other tactics to avoid the advances of overeager males, proving they’re not defenseless and passive.
 
Who'd a thunk it? A behavior shared between Amphibian and Simian Females...

How Female Frogs Fight Off the Mating Ball

They pretend they’re dead and use a variety of other tactics to avoid the advances of overeager males, proving they’re not defenseless and passive.
Don't most people have three of those lines ?? As far as faking it goes, yeah that's a thing with females also. :whistle:
 
a true WTF??!!???!??!

And you think you're having a bad day?


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An astrophysics shrine...

The Holmdel Horn, a Cosmic Shrine in New Jersey, Stays Put

The radio telescope that discovered the Big Bang has survived a real estate battle — for now.

The Holmdel Horn Antenna, which somewhat resembles the scoop of a giant steam shovel turned sideways, on a sunny day. Robert Wilson, visible but in the distance, stands beneath it.

The Holmdel Horn Antenna in Monmouth County, N.J., with its caretaker, Robert Wilson, a senior scientist at the Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Mass.Credit...Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

A radio telescope that discovered evidence of the Big Bang in 1964, revolutionizing the study of the universe, will remain in its original place on Crawford Hill in Holmdel, N.J, town officials announced last week.

Rakesh Antala, a real estate developer, had proposed building a senior housing center on the site, a plan that drew opposition from residents and far-flung astronomy buffs. But an agreement between town officials and Mr. Antala seemed to augur the end of the cosmic controversy.

The Holmdel Horn Antenna, as it is known, was built in 1959 by AT&T Bell Laboratories, the renowned research arm of the phone company, for an experiment called Project Echo that relayed messages by bouncing microwaves off giant aluminized balloons.

In 1964, two young astronomers, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, found themselves plagued by an omnidirectional hiss as they surveyed the night sky for their own research. The static was eventually identified as leftover heat from the Big Bang. Its existence provided compelling evidence that the universe had started with a tremendous explosion; ever since, astrophysicists have been studying this radiation for clues to how and why the Big Bang happened.
 

"Owners point to a confluence of factors for the brutal decline," the outlet wrote. "Widespread tech layoffs mean fewer catering gigs and fewer diners during the workday. San Francisco restaurateurs believe a negative national narrative about the city has contributed to sluggish tourism (which has started to bounce back, but not yet to pre-pandemic levels). Inflation has made dining out more expensive."

But the jobs report keeps "surprising". Read the fine print on those reports.
 

Car repossessions tumbled in the early days of the pandemic as the government sent trillions in stimulus money to American homes and businesses. But repossessions have progressively ticked higher as sky-high prices for used and new cars alike forced consumers to take out bigger loans.

In September, the percentage of auto borrowers who were at least 60 days late on their bills rose to 6.11%, according to a Fitch Ratings report obtained by FOX Business. That marks the highest default level in nearly three decades and is a notable increase from the previous record of 5.93% in January.

Unsurprisingly, vehicle repossessions are also expected to climb in coming months. Cox Automotive estimates that 1.5 million vehicles will be seized by the end of 2023, up from 1.2 million last year. That remains below the typical pre-pandemic level.
 

Car repossessions tumbled in the early days of the pandemic as the government sent trillions in stimulus money to American homes and businesses. But repossessions have progressively ticked higher as sky-high prices for used and new cars alike forced consumers to take out bigger loans.

In September, the percentage of auto borrowers who were at least 60 days late on their bills rose to 6.11%, according to a Fitch Ratings report obtained by FOX Business. That marks the highest default level in nearly three decades and is a notable increase from the previous record of 5.93% in January.

Unsurprisingly, vehicle repossessions are also expected to climb in coming months. Cox Automotive estimates that 1.5 million vehicles will be seized by the end of 2023, up from 1.2 million last year. That remains below the typical pre-pandemic level.
Maybe if they did not have an insurance payment ( law in-forced by government ) they could make the car payment.
 
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