Saturday, May 31, 2008
More grant research
At 646LB is this Mekong Giant Catfish the largest freshwater fish in the world?
But...
Finally...
...although the above specimens are truly magnificent creatures, do they really inspire the minds of UK Anglers? Since they are not rod and line captures its hard to relate fish of this size to our conventional ideas about freshwater sport-fishing, so how about this?
At 242LB this Giant Siamese Carp was captured on a Rod and Line by a gentleman named Lung Dam, in Thailand's now famous Bung Sam Lan Lake. It's hard to believe but this fish was one of 5 Carp that where stocked in the lake all around the same size less than 20 years ago, and although there have been many large Carp caught from the lake in recent years (The IGFA world record being broken over and over again), know one has come close to this feat. The large Carp are still there, and know one is absolutely sure just how large they are today. Some suggest the Giant Siamese Carp can grow to 600LB, whilst other credible sources say tha Bung sam Lan contains carp over 400LB. The largest carp are undoubtedly hooked from time to time, we have witnessed this fact. The challenge is to actually land such a specimen. It is fish such as these that have inspired us to try and encourage the UK's keenest anglers to come and try their luck in Thailand, you could quite possibly be the next world record holder!
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Scholastic visitor
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Saturday, May 24, 2008
From the Email Inbox: rocker
She said it made her feel like a little kid again.
She is now 88
Thanks
D.
Friday, May 23, 2008
KAC Grant Revisions
W.L. Bicycle
----- Original Message -----From: JB OttoSent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 11:27 PMDo you have a world's largest bicycle? Don't know if this qualifies, but it is BIG.
http://www.elroy-sparta-trail.com/sparta.htm
With Windows Live for mobile, your contacts travel with you. Connect on the go.
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Thursday, May 22, 2008
Wanna play? Catsup Bottle Festival July 12 & 13
To: Erika Nelson ; World's Largest Things
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2008 10:39 AM
Subject: Wanna play? Catsup Bottle Festival July 12 & 13
Hi Erika! How have you been? All is swell, I hope!
2 quick questions:
(1) Have I been a big dummy and let my membership support lapse for WLT, Inc. I remember getting something in the mail... being confused (duh, my bad not yours)... and setting it aside never to be seen again. :-(
(2) Can you make it to the fest this year? We'd love to have you of course!!!! It's July 12 & 13. We received a sponsor for your appearance from Caldwell Tanks, the water tower company. I know gas prices are outrageous right now - but email and let me know what you think. ;-)
Hope to hear from you soon!
Big Tomato, World's Largest Catsup Bottle Central Command
PO Box 617
Collinsville, Illinois 62234
bigtomato@catsupbottle.com
http://www.catsupbottle.com/
http://www.catsupbottlesummerfest.com/
From: WLT Inc.
Hi, Big Tomato! Glad to see the CatsupFest back to being it's glorious self... The Mobile Museum did its last appearance in July of last year, so we can start focusing on building the NEW Bigger Better Version! Which is taking MUCH longer than anticipated... That means that the old Mobile Museum is not longer Mobile.
HOWEVER... I do have a smaller Art Car, which speaks about the same things (roadside attractions, exploring the offbeat) and features a mural of WLTs (including the Catsup Bottle) and roadside attractions. We've been pairing the small Art Car with a smaller portable set of WSVs and photos, tailoring the display to the event/venue.
We could develop an Illinois/St.Louis area, or Watertower Wonders, or Rt. 66, or a little of all set for the Catsup Festival, with the small Art Car "Scout", if you'd like to have us! Whaddya think? Pics of "Scout" online here: http://www.worldslargestthings.com/scout.htm
From: Big Tomato
That all sounds good. I think a little display of Rt 66 and/or Illinois/St. Louis would be fun. But that's just me... Soooooooo, I'll explain all this the "the committee" and see what gets decided.
The festival is 2 days. If you could make it by 4:00 for the cruise on Saturday that would be great. And then all day Sunday until 5:00 just like before.
From: WLT Inc.
Yep! The display would still be a good selection (aprox. 20 models or more, and accompanying images) from the World's Largest Collection of the World's Smallest Versions of the World's Largest Things, just a little different format... Please, let me know if you need any further information for the committee, and hope to see ya...
Cruise at 4:00, Sat. July 12, overnight, and all day Sun. until 5:00. It's on the calendar - let me know what they say.
Thanks for the invitation, and see you soon!
-Erika, Director, WLT Inc.
London Telegraph - March 25, 2008
The opportunity to drive across the US was too good to pass up, says Toby Amies. And he can't wait to do it again.

Last summer I visited a rather large drive-through art gallery called "The United States of America". It was my job to co-present a documentary television series, Artland USA. The idea was to combine the great American road trip with a celebration of American art and architecture.
The plan was simple but ambitious – to drive from Key West in Florida, the southernmost point in the continental US, to Anchorage in Alaska. En route, we would visit the most fascinating and extraordinary buildings, art galleries, installations and artists we could find. Overall it took about three months and we covered nearly 10,000 miles. It was a huge undertaking, and what started as a job soon became a way of life.

I'd fallen in love with the idea of a road trip across North America in my twenties, thanks to a predictable but potent list of artists who celebrated American life on the move: Hunter S. Thompson, Jack Kerouac, David Lynch, Tom Waits, Robert Frank, Edward Hopper and a host of others created a longing in me for the promise and terror of the wide open highway.
They inspired me to participate in one of America's most powerful myths: one made up of adventure, freedom, mystery, natural beauty, manifest destiny and some spectacularly fattening foods.
It's a myth that you can join easily: just fly to America, hire a car and point it in the direction of... almost anywhere. But you do need to have a mission. Like Jake and Elwood Blues of Blues Brothers fame, a divine one is ideal, but it can just as easily be gastronomic or historical.
A mission is essential but an itinerary is a fun-killer. You need freedom to roam on the roads not be strait-jacketed by a schedule – on Artland we had to work to a tight timetable that meant tearing ourselves from some locations long before it seemed right: New Orleans, still in ruins after Hurricane Katrina, was for us just a (sad) day. We were shocked to see buses touring the disaster zones, before realising we ourselves were in a bus, touring the disaster zone...
What you drive matters. Our principle vehicle for the trip was a giant RV (recreational vehicle) covered in Pollock-style paint splashes that looked great from the outside but severely restricted visibility.
The RV was also uncomfortable – go for a car with maximum visibility and comfort, and use the money saved by not renting an RV to stay somewhere where the air-conditioning works and you don't have to empty your own lavatory.
Our RV was unwieldy and hard to stop, but the greatest scourge of the trip after our limited time was the driver's friend but traveller's enemy: the sat-nav. Its mechanical expediency was the antithesis of our mission.
But the ugly little box that clung to the windscreen (further impeding our vision) was ruthlessly focused on times and distances, and it kept us imprisoned on the interstates when the best of the US is found away from its major roads. Put the sat-nav in the glove box, use a map so you can see where you're going and where you've been, and save the robot helper for getting you through the labyrinthine American cities.
As for how long to spend on your road trip, I'd work out how long you think you need and then add as many days as you can afford simply to wander. One experience I'll never forget, for example, is the time we wandered off our itinerary to steal a quick meal in Tupelo, Mississippi, Elvis's birthplace, made all the more delicious because we shouldn't have been there.

A road trip needn't be expensive, as motels and food in America can be had very cheaply and if it's visual culture you're after, most of the art and architecture we experienced was free. Thanks to a very active system of patronage and noblesse oblige, America is littered with giant public and privately-funded institutions all competing with each other for your attention.
Thus even the sleepiest midwestern city is likely to have a heavy-duty collection including Picassos, Rothkos, Monets, and Oldenbergs – sometimes it can seem as if they are completing a shopping list: for example, we came across slightly different versions of the same sculpture by one artist in three museums – but this was more than made up for by the wealth of unique intuitive or outsider art that is easily accessible all over the country.

Take Kansas for example. It has a reputation for gentle dullness and certainly, once you've got used to having a flat and infinite horizon in all directions, there is certain consistency to a drive through the state that can be a little wearisome after the first 300 miles or so, but it's full of the most wonderful creative works that cost us nothing to see except fuel, food and lodging.
The tiny, friendly college town of Lawrence (pop. 89,110) which was home to William Burroughs, has a Monet and a Manet in its Spencer Museum of Art. Then not that far from Lawrence, the even tinier town of Lucas is now a worldwide centre for self-taught arts and artists, thanks to it's world-famous Garden of Eden, with 30ft-high allegorical sculptures fashioned in concrete by S.P. Dinsmooor, who finished his auto-monument by building his own mausoleum containing a glass-fronted coffin.
Just a short skip across the state line into in Kansas City (technically in Missouri) we found one of the architectural marvels of the 21st century. What's more, you can wander in and around the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art's recently opened Bloch Building for free. By day this beautiful space is lit inside by opaque glass walls and at night, lit from inside those walls, it resembles a ghost building and is like nothing I'd seen before. That's not all we did in Kansas, but it's the kind of thing you can find in any state if you give yourself the room to wander.
I'm writing this in Queenstown, New Zealand, where you can buy a T-shirt that has the town's name with a ticked box next to it, and the word "done" under it. After thousands of miles, and all that I saw and marvelled at on the road, I still don't feel that I have "done" the American road trip. I have merely done one, and that makes me want to do another.
'Artland USA', Sundays at 7pm on Sky Arts.
Kansas painted NICELY in UK newspaper!
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/northamerica/usa/761721/The-art-of-the-American-road-trip.html
For the best content online, visit www.telegraph.co.uk
WLCoWSVoWLT on TV
The second series of Artland which we produced for Gallery HD last summer begins transmission on Sky Arts on Sunday March 9. Each episode is being shown at least four times in the week.
Tony Amies and Mame McCutchin are the hosts for a trip across America from Key West, Florida to Anchorage, Alaska. Along the way we visited artists including John Chamberlain, museums such as the Kimbell in Fort Worth and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, great architecture by Rem Koolhaas, Frank Lloyd Wright and others, as well as weird and wonderful Americana of all kinds, including Houston's Art Car Parade.
Toby has written engagingly about the experience for the Telegraph here.
Net Work - ArtLand, Catsup Fest, and LJW
This year's Catsup Festival is in Collinsville, IL, July 12 & 13... WSVs may be there... We'll keep ya' posted.
And, we've been chatting with a reporter from the Lawrence (KS) Journal World, doing a story on a sculpture competition for the Wakarusa River Valley Historical Society's Freedom's Light tower project. Erika, Director of WLT Inc., was one of the four finalists chosed to present a proposal. Article to run this weekend in the LJW.
That's what's up here at the home base, pre-noon on a windy, weird Thursday...
EN & RW
Monday, May 19, 2008
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Montage-a-Google
Thursday, May 15, 2008
In mourning the passing of an Art Car friend...
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
To the WLT Board Members...
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Article from the Columbia Missourian: Three friends travel the nation, spreading the “wisdom” of their large creation
By TIFFANY CHAN and ERIN ASH
KANSAS CITY — Although the purpose of the 1982 "twine-a-thon" in Cawker City, Kan., was to make sure the ball of twine was truly the biggest, it ended up being the inspiration for the world's largest ball of three-quarter-inch videotape.
Twenty-six years later, "proud co-creators" Randy Mason and Don Mayberger share custody of the odd, record-setting ball and are happy to show it off.
"We thought, 'We oughta have a big ball of somethin','" Mason said, adding that the videotape ball has grown to a "back-surgery-inducing" 68.5 pounds.
While mulling their quest for a world record, Mason and Mayberger tried to pick a medium unlikely to draw competition. As employees of a cable station in Lawrence, Kan., at the time, they chose videotape and started winding up old tape from the station.
"It's a stupid thing, but it's our stupid thing," Mason said.
One spool contains 60 minutes worth of videotape and weighs 3 or 4 ounces, meaning the ball contains somewhere between 275 and 350 hours of video.
"We always hope that someday in the future, scientists will devise a way to just play the ball of tape," Mason said.
Creating the big ball was one challenge. Getting it some good publicity was another. Mason and Mayberger tried to get the ball some national notice on "The Late Show" with David Letterman but failed twice. Finally, in 1995, the ball made its TV debut on "Rare Visions and Roadside Revelations," a show created by Mason, Mayberger and co-worker Mike Murphy and produced by Kansas City Public Television. The show chronicles the adventures of the trio as they travel around the country with their impressive sphere of videotape. Although it initially was intended to be a one-time special, they have now produced 66 episodes.
"The core is celebrating people's creativity," Mason said. "Real creativity goes beyond training and the joy that it can bring, and that shows up in so many different ways."
Mason, Mayberger and Murphy are known to their viewers as the "TV Weasels." Mayberger said the name fits because they enjoy receiving free items like T-shirts and hats from the places they visit. But more than that, he said, "the show is so much fun that we almost feel like we're weaseling fun out of the universe."
Sometimes, Mayberger said, viewers recognize the Weasels and shout things like, "Hey, you Weasels, where's the ball?"
"It's kind of like a freak of technology and nature," Mayberger said. "And it makes people shout stupid stuff at me from the sidewalk. And anytime strangers can do that, I'd say that's an example of the power it has."
The Weasels say the ball travels well, though it sometimes suffers the indignity of being covered with potato chip crumbs. Mason and Murphy sit in the front, while Mayberger rides in back of the vehicle with the ball.
"Yes, it is (a good companion)," Mayberger said. "I have to say, it never complains - it's a friend of mine."
The Weasels recalled a trip to Florida, where they were trying to cajole an artist into talking with them. He showed little interest until he saw the big ball of videotape. That's when he recognized the Weasels from their show and became enthusiastic about talking to them.
"It was the greatest moment," Mason said.
The road can sometimes be threatening, though. During a visit to Hermann, the ball nearly rolled down a hill into the Missouri River.
"You really have to deal with this gravity thing," Mason said.
If the videotape were able to record its adventures, Mason said, it probably would have some wisdom to impart. "The ball would say, 'When you don't realize what's out there, you miss a lot,'" Mason said.
The television show — and the videotape — gives the Weasels a good reason to get off the beaten path and show people's creativity while laughing but not mocking.
"If a big ball of tape can let us do that, we'll keep winding," Mason said.
Mayberger also said he would like to keep the ball going so as not to disappoint its fans.
"People are more interested in seeing the ball than us, often, so I guess we just have to maintain its celebrity status and keep it," Mayberger said.
Winding up 68.5 pounds of videotape isn't easy.
"It's all about the tension on the tape because it's a slick substance, and it will easily unwind if you aren't pulling tightly," Mayberger said. They use adhesive tape to keep it together and have to wear thick gloves when winding.
"Gloves are required because, like paper cuts, videotape cuts are not what you wanna have," Mayberger said.
Mayberger said the ball gets heavier faster than it gets larger. The bigger it gets, the more challenging it is to add to it.
An eighth-grade science class in north Kansas City once challenged Mason and Mayberger and created a videotape that was bigger, but only for a week. Mayberger quickly added 12 pounds of tape to the Weasels' ball.
Erika Nelson, who met the Weasels and saw the ball during a 2003 filming session, was inspired enough to create the world's smallest replica of the world's largest ball of tape by using micro-cassette tape.
"One of the fun comments from (Mayberger) was, 'Oh, you can't keep your ball of tape wound either,'" Nelson said. "The same trials and tribulations with the big ball apply with the small ball."
Nelson was able to take a picture of the two balls together years later, which she said "is just a crowning achievement of absurdity when you're talking about the world's largest things."
Nelson said the videotape ball is different from other examples of world's largest things in Missouri because the Weasels travel with it. Although you can go see it, there's a chance it might come to you.
"They've given it a personality," Nelson said.
To see the world's largest ball of videotape, call Kansas City Public Television at 816-756-3580.
Weird Tales of Missouri!
Saturday, May 10, 2008
Social Networking...
SO - WLT now on FACEBOOK!, incorporating these blog feeds into the notes. We've also added blog posts to an RSS feed on the MySpace page, as well as a Calendar Application to the blog to keep track of upcoming events.
-RW
Friday, May 9, 2008
Best SPAM Content yet...
Woooohooo
All, I believe, figured out that there was an additional 'set' of points available with the Chair-E Tree, Deer Menorah, Demon Mobile, and Box O' Skulls.
Thanks for coming by, and good luck!
-EN, WLT Inc.
Scav Hunt Teams trickling in!
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Sneaky University of Chicago Students - Here's a Clue!
See item #69 on the Scavanger Hunt - I'll be a-waitin'...
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
World's Largest Box of Chocolates
Londoners Alaistair, 5 (left) and Megan, 8, pull one of the huge sweets out of the box which stands 16.5 metres tall, 5.04 metres long and 11.5 feet wide in Leicester Square, central London.
The confectionary manufacturer broke the Guinness book of records for the world's largest box of chocolates with over 175,000 individually wrapped Thorntons Moments.
Kansas Lifeline Magazine
Start of a World's Largest Thing! The Foible
Jude's, of Jamestown KS, is working on a foil ball, named (by Susie Haver) "Foilble", after the grandmother of the owner exclaimed "You're Wasting All That FOIL!" on November 28, 2007. They had it on display at the corner of their food tent at last weekend's Kansas Sampler Festival in Concordia, Kansas.
Currently, Flying Pie Pizza of Boise Idaho has a 254 lb. foil ball named Flora, with a goal of one ton (2000 lbs.) to break the record.











