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The 16 Most Outrageous Ways Rolls-Royce Can Customize Your Car

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Rolls-Royce Bespoke design aviator

Beyond engineering excellence, one key strength of Rolls-Royce is customization. In 2012, 84% of Phantom customers commissioned their cars with some sort of bespoke design, and their ideas get pretty wild.

The luxury brand notes that "no request is left unexplored." Its team of designers has matched leather colors to customer lipstick, sourced wood from a tree on a buyer's estate, and found ways to pack elaborate picnic sets and wine glasses into their cars.

From the unexpected demands of wealthy buyers (Rolls-Royce doesn't like the term "crazy") to the special edition cars it makes to mark special occasions, here are some of the most outrageous ways you can have your Rolls made just for you.

One wealthy customer wanted a thermos installed in the door. Rolls-Royce had to build a special door just to crash test the design, then build another for the buyer.



Another customer commissioned this hand-crafted picnic set.



Bespoke designers had to devise a way to store wine glasses in the trunk and make sure they wouldn't break while on the road.



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Will 'Twerk' And Other Surprising Words Added To The Oxford Dictionary Online Stand The Test Of Time?

7 Apps That Will Make Holiday Shopping A Breeze

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window shopping

Holiday shopping can get hectic. Thankfully, smartphones can make this annual activity a lot easier.

In addition to store-specific apps that may offer deals, like at Macy's and Target, these are the programs that everyone should try out: 

RetailMeNot

You may never cut coupons again after downloading RetailMeNot. This app lets you search for the best deals at many stores, and you can just show your phone at the register to redeem them. The app can even use your location to let you know if there are deals at nearby stores. 

Price: Free

Available for Apple and Android devices. 

The Christmas List

The Christmas List is a user-friendly app that's great for keeping a budget and tracking shopping progress. Set a budget for each person so you never go overboard, and organize your list by store so that you don't leave the mall without something you needed. A countdown to Christmas at the top of the app will make sure you don't leave everything for the least minute. 

Price: $1.99

Available for Apple devices. 

Wanelo app

Wanelo

If you have no idea what to buy for the people on your list and don't have a lot of time to go out and shop, Wanelo (Want, Need, Love) gives you a constant stream of products for sale online. You can order the goods as you see them, or you can save products to your profile to buy later.

Price: Free

Available for Apple and Android devices.  

Pounce

This app will help you to make good use of the catalogs and circulars you get in the mail. All you have to do is take a picture of a product you want to buy, and the app will recognize the image and prepare you for checkout. Pounce currently supports purchases from Target, Macy's, Staples, and Toys "R" Us, and its options are quickly expanding. 

Price: Free

 Available for Apple devices. 

Shopular

Check this app when you enter the mall. Shopular can use your location to send you coupons for popular stores that happen to be nearby. The coupons are updated daily, so you'll always be getting the best deals on your holiday shopping. 

Price: Free

Available for Apple and Android devices. 

Jifiti app

Jifiti

It can be tough to guess which color or size your friend might want in a gift. Jifiti solves this problem — with just the click of a button, you can send a customizable gift to your friend's inbox. They can choose the size or color of the gift you sent them, or they can choose something different altogether. Shop from dozens of stores like Barnes & Noble, Sephora, Brookstone, and Williams-Sonoma to buy gifts that can be redeemed online or in-store. 

Price: Free

Available for Apple and Android devices. 

ShopSavvy

With this app, you can make lists of products you love and see the things your friends are recommending. The best part of this app is its price comparison feature. Just scan the bar code of a product into the app, and it will tell you if another store is selling it for cheaper.  

Price: Free

Available for Apple and Android devices. 

SEE ALSO: 5 Holiday Shopping Tips To Stay On Budget

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A Student Dating Site For British Universities Just Crowned The UK's 'Horniest Student'

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Elina Desaine Horniest Student Exeter

A British dating website that focuses on helping students find sexual encounters at their university just named the winner for their first ever "UK's Horniest Student" contest. 

Shag at Uni is a student dating service that is apparently very popular in Britain — a 2012 article in the Huffington Post called Shag at Uni a "a huge success" after 30,000 people signed up over its first two months. As their website states,

Our sole purpose is to help students meet up for sex. This isn't an ordinary student dating site. We offer a space for students to get laid any night of the week and not have any of the strings attached with dating. So if you want to find sexy students at your university who just want a shag, JOIN UP! We're sure you'll have fun!

Last month, Shag at Uni expanded their profile by starting a "Horniest Student" contest for British universities. The site says they recieved more than 300 entries from students around the UK. 

The winner — Elina Desaine — is a 20-year-old computer science major at Exeter University. According to Shag at Uni's blog, "Elina claims to have slept with 16 different guys whilst at university and says she prefers older guys."

Shag at Uni writes that some of Desaine's "proudest sexual encounters" include "hooking up with two older bartenders at her university's student union, having sex in the computer room and stripping naked to the Baywatch theme tune whenever it is played in her local night club."

Not only does she take home the title, but Shag at Uni is awarding Desaine a year's supply of condoms, £500 cash (around $800), a Samsung mobile phone, some alcohol, and a year’s membership to their website "so she can continue to have fun at uni."

Via Shag at Uni's blog, here's Desaine's winning entry:

I should be the UK's horniest student because I have sex with at least 2 / 3 different people a week. Sometimes i go clubbing, have sex with someone, and then go back to the club to pick up my second victim. Feeling horny right now, so might just text someone on my 'shag list' and do it in the computer room (I've done this before, was great!) With your help of Alcohol, I will be able to become an even Hornier Student!

You can read more about Desaine at Shag at Uni's blog, and for more "Horniest Student" entries, check out Shag at Uni's Facebook page

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People Are Waiting In iPhone-ish Lines For The World's Most Coveted Bourbon

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Last month, 65 cases of Panny Van Winkle — currently the most coveted bourbon in the world — up and disappeared from a warehouse in Kentucky. 

You might think the booze thiefs were in it for the money, as a 20-year Pappy comes with a suggested retail price of $130. But perhaps they were just anticipating crazy liquor store lines.

As Grubstreet reports, Tuesday was "Pappy Day" in Kentucky, with customers waiting for hours to get their hands on a 15-, 20-, or 23-year-old bottle.

Check out some of the photos:

SEE ALSO: Why Pappy Van Winkle Is The White Whale Of Bourbons

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'Gravity'-Inspired Movie Trailer Shows Everyone's Nightmare Of Getting Trapped In IKEA

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Making a trip to IKEA can be a real nightmare — the furniture giant is known for massive stores with layouts that are meant to disorient customers and trap them inside for longer than they planned to be there.

This fake movie trailer posted on YouTube earlier this week is a play on the popular movie "Gravity," but as Jezebel points out, it's "several times more terrifying" than the real thing.

The trailer makes getting trapped in an IKEA seem pretty similar to being lost in outer space: "At over 364,000 square feet, there is no sense of direction, no silence, bad cell service ... Life in IKEA is impossible."

With 332 stores in 38 countries, hundreds of millions of people experience this kind of terror every year.

SEE ALSO: 13 facts about IKEA that will blow your mind

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Here Are The Spectacular Plans For A Floating Airport In London

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London's Heathrow is the fourth busiest airport on the planet, and it's not nearly big enough to handle the doubling in traffic the UK's Department for Transport predicts will hit by 2030.

Some want to construct a third runway, but that would likely require the demolition of entire villages, as Heathrow is in a dense area outside London.

There is a more outlandish idea that takes advantage of unused space: Build a new airport, and make it float on the estuary of the Thames River. One group pushing for this option, the Thames Estuary Research and Development Company (Testrad) has released new plans for its "innovative and spectacular" London Britannia Airport.

It certainly is spectacular. Here's the view from the air:

London Britannia floating airport rendering

And a panoramic rendering:

London Britannia floating airport rendering 2

The interior looks awesome:

London Britannia floating airport rendering interior concourse

The map includes space for future expansion:

London Britannia floating airport map

Testrad argues that a fresh airport would allow for better connections to the rest of the UK's transportation networks:

London Britannia floating airport rendering access map

PLAN B: London's Airport Wants To Expand — It Just Has To Demolish These Villages First

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Why It May Be Legal For Affair Site Ashley Madison To Lure Guys With Fake Profiles

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Ashley MadisonAshley Madison— the dating site for married cheaters — is being sued by a woman who claims she hurt her wrists writing its bogus profiles. However, she never alleges the bogus profiles are illegal, as our Jim Edwards has noted.

So are bogus profiles on a dating website illegal? Business Insider spoke to Eric Goldman, director of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara Law to get some insight into Ashley Madison's bogus profiles. It turns out they may be in a legal gray area.

That's because Ashley Madison actually discloses in its terms of agreement that some of its "Ashley's Angel's" profiles may be "fictitious." Here's what the terms say about "Ashley's Angels:"

The purpose of our Ashley’s AngelsTM is to provide entertainment, to allow you to explore our Services and to promote greater participation in our Services. Ashley’s AngelsTM attempt to simulate communications with real members to encourage more conversation and interaction with users. We also use Ashley’s AngelsTM to monitor user communications and use of our Service to measure compliance with the Terms. Further, we may use Ashley’s AngelsTM in connection with our market research to enable us to analyze user preferences, trends, patterns and information about our customer base. Ashley’s AngelsTM are not intended to resemble or mimic any actual persons.

These user terms could enable Ashley Madison to successfully argue that it was being upfront about being just "a fantasy" and "a fiction," Goldman told us. If users are just paying for the fantasy, then the site could argue they're "getting exactly what they're paying for," Goldman said.

However, Ashley Madison may get into trouble if somebody can prove its marketing pitches let on that users are getting more than a fantasy. "You can't disclose in the user agreement things that conflict with their basic marketing pitches," Goldman said.

Dating sites have been sued in the past by users for allegedly promoting bogus profiles. Yahoo Personals and Match.com have both been sued by disgruntled users who claimed they kept inactive profiles on the sites to make it look like they had more subscribers than they actually did.

Ashley Madison — and other sites with fake profiles — may face enforcement actions from the Federal Trade Commission, which has been more aggressive lately about fake content online, according to Goldman.

"They [the FTC] hate the idea that there is fake information on the Internet," Goldman said. "In my mind this is just another extension of inauthentic content online."

For its part, Ashley Madison owner Avid Life Media said in a statement provided to Business Insider that its service is "100% authentic, as described in our terms and conditions."

"We stand by our product so much that we offer a 100% guarantee if service does not meet every expectation," the company said.

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One Of The World's Most Poisonous Creatures Is Now On Display In NYC

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poison

Toxic animals and plants are the focus of a new exhibit, "The Power of Poison," opening at Manhattan's American Museum of Natural History on Saturday, Nov. 16. 

Although certain man-made radioactive elements, like plutonium, are among the most poisonous substances in the world, the objective of this display was "to go after poisons in the natural environment," said exhibit curator Mark Siddall. 

Visitors enter a section that represents the Chocó forest in Colombia, home to venomous species like the golden poison frog. A single frog has enough venom to kill 10 grown men.

The exhibit also explores poison's role in history, from its use as a murder weapon to its benefits in medicine. 

Visitors can check out three golden poison frogs as they walk through a section about Colombia's Chocó forest. Though only the size of a paper-clip, the poison found in this frog's skin is, ounce-for-ounce, one of the most toxic substances on Earth. In the wild, the frog's poison comes from its diet. The museum's frogs are fed crickets and are not dangerous.



There are all types of venomous species in nature. The zebra longwing butterfly caterpillars can eat the toxic leaves of passion flowers, which makes the adult butterfly poisonous to predators.



Almost everything inside this beautiful aquarium is toxic. Sea anemones, for example, use poison to capture their prey. Other creatures may use poison to defend themselves.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






One Of The World's Most Poisonous Creatures Is Now On Display In NYC

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poison

Toxic animals and plants are the focus of a new exhibit, "The Power of Poison," opening at Manhattan's American Museum of Natural History on Saturday, Nov. 16. 

Although certain man-made radioactive elements, like plutonium, are among the most poisonous substances in the world, the objective of this display was "to go after poisons in the natural environment," said exhibit curator Mark Siddall. 

Visitors enter a section that represents the Chocó forest in Colombia, home to venomous species like the golden poison frog. A single frog has enough venom to kill 10 grown men.

The exhibit also explores poison's role in history, from its use as a murder weapon to its benefits in medicine. 

Visitors can check out three golden poison frogs as they walk through a section about Colombia's Chocó forest. Though only the size of a paper-clip, the poison found in this frog's skin is, ounce-for-ounce, one of the most toxic substances on Earth. In the wild, the frog's poison comes from its diet. The museum's frogs are fed crickets and are not dangerous.



There are all types of venomous species in nature. The zebra longwing butterfly caterpillars can eat the toxic leaves of passion flowers, which makes the adult butterfly poisonous to predators.



Almost everything inside this beautiful aquarium is toxic. Sea anemones, for example, use poison to capture their prey. Other creatures may use poison to defend themselves.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






7 Reasons Why America Should Legalize Prostitution

CRISTIANO RONALDO: How The World's Highest-Paid Soccer Player Makes And Spends His Millions

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cristiano ronaldo girlfriend irina shayk

"I think that because I am rich, handsome and a great player people are envious of me. I don't have any other explanation."

That's Cristiano Ronaldo talking about why people hate him.

While other soccer players date models and appear in underwear ads too, no one's lifestyle gets under the skin of soccer fans like Ronaldo's.

He earned $42.5 million last year, making him the ninth highest-paid athlete on earth.

Source: Forbes



He just signed a contract that'll pay him $23 million per year until 2018 — making him the world's highest-paid player.

Source: Marca



He makes almost that much ($22 million annually) in off-field endorsements.

Source: Forbes



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






47 Vintage Rolls-Royces Crossed The Alps In The Best Car Rally Of The Year [PHOTOS]

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rolls-royce centenary alpine trial

In June, Rolls-Royce gathered 47 vintage Ghosts, joined by their 21st century descendant, to recreate the 1913 Alpine Trial, a week-long endurance rally around Central Europe.

This week, the Centenary Alpine Trial won the award for "Best Rally or Tour of the Year" at the International Historic Motoring Awards in London.

150 participants from 12 countries took off from Vienna on an 1,800 mile trip that would include Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, and Italy.

On the gorgeous mountain passes and ocean roads, the classic cars made for a beautiful sight.

Here's a map of the route the cars followed in 1913.



The 2013 route took the cars through Austria, Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia.



Before starting out on June 14, the cars lined up in Vienna's Stadtpark.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






23 Recent Works Of Art That Shook History

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Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait with thorn necklace and hummingbirdThere is no denying the power of a work of art, which can evoke certain feelings or even manipulate the viewer's emotions beyond his control.

But there are also works that rattle the very infrastructure of art and the idea of what it means to create. Whether intentionally or unintentionally, they shape our history.

We asked the experts at Paddle8, an online art auction house that hosts both themed and benefit sales, to help us curate a list of some of the most revolutionary artwork of all time. Since the complete history of art is so vast, we limited their selections to the last 200 years or so  the relatively recent Modern and Contemporary eras.

"The Third of May" by Francisco Goya (1808)

"Goya's depiction of the Spanish resistance to Napoleon's armies during the occupation of 1808 was a groundbreaking image of the horrors of war," Paddle8's experts said. Goya broke out from other artists of his day by showing an unheroic scene in the conflict, with the rebels in a passive surrender, rather than a glorifying charge.

El Tres de Mayo, Francisco de Goya, The Third of May

via Wikipedia



"Olympia" by Edouard Manet (1863)

"The frank sexuality and direct stare of Manet's subject, a prostitute, turned the idea of the 'male gaze' on its head," said Paddle8. "No longer was a reclining nude available only for the pleasure of the viewer; she was confronting him head on." Manet also met resistance based on the model he chose to paint. Unlike the ideal "Venus" of the time — soft, round, and glowing — this model was thinner, and presented in harsher lighting.

Edouard Manet, Olympia

via Wikipedia



"The Bathers" by Paul Cezanne (1889–1905)

"The grandfather of Cubism, Cezanne intentionally painted works that were not easy to interpret or appealing to the fashion of the time," said Paddle8. "With 'The Bathers,' he created a work that was both timeless and abstract." It was his goal to draw artists away from "fad" styles of painting that he thought wouldn't last.

Paul Cézanne, The Bathers

via Wikipedia



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






Incredible Panoramas Of The World's Most Beautiful Places

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36_242620_ThebestAirPanophotosA small team of Russian photographers have quietly been creating some of the most detailed panoramas in the world

AirPano is made of eight team members, who have wide-ranging backgrounds (civil engineering and medical cybernetics, among others). The amateur photographers are currently traveling around the world, shooting major cities and other sites of interest. 

The group mainly shoots from helicopters, using a specialized rig that holds 3-4 cameras, arranged circularly. They also sometimes shoot from rooftops or use light jets, dirigibles, hot air balloons and radio-controlled helicopters. 

Sergey Semonov, who created a panorama of Manhattan that won first prize at the Epson International Photographic Pano Awards, told The Atlantic why he finds panoramic photography so interesting.

"I like new, progressive and unique things,” Semonov said.

The group has created over 700 panoramas already, which you can check out on their website. We’ve put together a selection of our favorites.

This is the shot of Central Park that won first prize at the Epson International Photographic Pano Awards. It became a mini-sensation earlier this year when it was first published.



All of the Russian photographers are amateurs and run AirPano for fun. For this one, they traveled to Churun-meru (Dragon) fall in Venezuela.



For this panorama of Mount Everest, photographer Ivan Roslyakov traveled to a record height above Everest at 23294 feet.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    







Two Days Of Weekend Is Too Much

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lazy

It's Sunday, and one of the things I notice every Sunday is that interest in the news is significantly higher than it is on Saturdays.

Twitter feels more active on Sundays. Traffic to Business Insider is almost always meaningfully higher on Sundays than on Saturdays. And of course, traditional media has always used Sunday for big marquee products, whether they be the New York Times Magazine or Meet The Press.

It seems that totally disconnecting for two days is too excruciating for a lot of people, so that by Sunday morning they're eager to start getting back into the swing of things.

Why don't people want to disconnect more?

Kit Juckes, an economist at SocGen, wrote a post on his personal blog yesterday on the blurring of work and leisure in modern life that may explain some of this. In his post he talks about spending his weekend writing and reading about ... economics (which is what he's paid to do during the week):

We still go to 'work' for money, but quite a lot of people would do the same thing in their leisure time as they do at work. One of the tragedies of our society is that so many old people suffer from loneliness and that's one reason why people work. You go to work to get paid, but it becomes a centre of your social life. I've seen too many men retire and then age 5 years in a few months and slowly vegetate because they have no idea what to do with their time, to believe that a life of enforced 'leisure' is so appealing that it should be the dominant goal of my working life.

I choose economics as a way to spend time, for work or in leisure. It would have been nice to have played golf this morning but frost having intervened, I've spent a couple of enjoyable hours reading. Was that work or leisure? The answer is that today, it's leisure because I'm not being paid. And that's a good thing because otherwise, I'd have to count all the hours I spend thinking about financial markets as 'work' and that would immediately make me less productive.

Far from everyone has a job where they're truly stimulated, and get to be around people who provide them an invigorating level of social interaction. But for the people who do have that, two days is a long time to totally shut that out. After a day, it's time to start warming back up and getting into work mode.

For many professionals it seems, Sunday is less a "day off" than it is to do similar things as you might do while "at work" but without the infrastructure and bureaucracy of being "on the job."

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Chinese Buyer Spends $177,000 To Win Rare Barrel Of Burgundy At Wine Auction

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A Chinese woman won the bidding for a coveted barrel of Burgundy wine at a Christie's-run charity auction in France on Sunday, paying 131,000 euros ($177,000) for her cask.

It was the first time a Chinese buyer came away with the top item at the annual auction for the Hospices de Beaune charity, where around 443 wines went under the hammer.

Yan Hong Cao, the successful young bidder who won the 456 litres of Meursault-Genevrieres, is from Yunan in southeastern China and owns a chain of shops, jade mines and tea plantations.

Michael Ganne, a representative from Christie's, which has run the auction since 2005, said a significant number of Asians had attended the event and that it generated "a lot of interest, with a small volume of vintage" available.

The proceeds from the auction will be distributed among various charities.

France is a major exporter of wine to China, which has become a key, fast-growing market.

Wine consumption in the world's most populous country more than doubled in the four years to 2011, and is set to rise another 40 percent by 2016, according to Vinexpo, the industry's top trade-fair organiser.

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Scuba Diving Couple In Thailand Faces Nightmare As Boat Deserts Them In Middle Of The Water

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Screen Shot 2013 11 18 at 5.59.28 AM

A Texas couple celebrating their first anniversary in Thailand found themselves abandoned in the ocean while scuba diving, Jared Dillingham of KHOU reports.

Lexa and Jake Mendenhall, on their first trip as certified scuba divers, made two one-hour dives before noticing that their boat was gone. They had been stranded with two instructors from the Thai diving company and another couple of novice divers.

"I kept thinking, 'What if there's no boat?  It's evening." Lexa Mendenhall told KHOU.

Apparently the boat captain had engine trouble and chose to go back to shore without them.

After 30 to 45 minutes bobbing on 5-foot waves — Lexa said she had previously seen sharks in the reef — a boat full of snorkelers noticed them, and they climbed in. 

"The fact that he left is just insane to me," Jake Mendenhall told KHOU. 

Here's the full report:

SEE ALSO: These 11 Attractions Can Only Be Seen Underwater

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The Eccentric Owner Of A Recently Discovered Nazi-Era Art Collection Hasn't Watched TV In 50 Years

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cornelius gurlitt

Earlier this month, German officials revealed they'd discovered a trove of more than 1,400 masterpieces, many believed looted by the Nazis.

The story is rife with controversy, not least because authorities kept the findings secret for about three years and have still not published a list of the works or located a single rightful owner, according to AFP.

The story gets even stranger when you learn about the guy who'd been keeping them all these years.

Cornelius Gurlitt, 81, says never had any intention of giving the works up, according a blockbuster interview with Der Spiegel published this weekend. Authorities only learned of him after he was detained with an unusually large amount of cash at the Swiss border in 2010. He'd maintained a bank account there after selling a work to a Swiss dealer.  

Since inheriting the works from his father Hildebrand Gurlitt, an art-world mogul who started doing business with the Nazis in 1933, Gurlitt has lived the life of an eccentric recluse. 

Here are some of the bizarre details recorded by Spiegel's Õzlem Gezer...

Gurlitt hasn't watched TV in 50 years:

"He stopped...when Germany's second public television network was launched, the "new station" with its trademark Mainzelmännchen cartoon characters. That was in 1963." 

But he's aware of modern celebrities:

"I'm not Boris Becker," he says. "What do these people want from me? I'm just a very quiet person. All I wanted to do was live with my pictures. Why are they photographing me for these newspapers, which normally only feature photos of shady characters?"

Traveling has its rituals. On his regular visits to his doctor, hundreds of kilometers away from Munich...:

"Gurlitt normally sits in the open coach car, to avoid being put in the embarrassing situation of having to look into other people's eyes. On this afternoon, however, there are no seats available in the open coach car, and Gurlitt has to sit in a compartment, which makes him anxious. He sits next to the glass door, so that the compartment looks full. He keeps his suitcase right next to him. It contains his red-and-white checked nightshirt, bread, cold cuts and his favorite carbonated drink. He needs the food for evenings in the hotel."

And he painstakingly reserves all his hotel rooms via snail mail:

"He books his hotel rooms months in advance by post, with letters written on a typewriter and signed with a fountain pen, which include the request to send a taxi to pick him up from the train station." 

Still, tech in 2013 dazzles him:

"He is amazed by telephones that display the caller's phone number. He knows that it's possible to search for things on the Internet, but he has never done it." 

There are more profound opinions. He thinks Munich, where Hitler launched his political career, and where, for now, Gurlitt lives, remains haunted:

"Munich is the 'source of all evil,' says Gurlitt. 'This is where the movement was founded...' He keeps repeating the same sentence, and when he does his quivering voice becomes louder...In Gurlitt's opinion, evil still appears to reside in the city."

Mostly Gurlitt comes off as a sad loner. He says he regrets having even lived this long, admitting he was not made out for the investigation, and that the works and the responsibility for them should have fallen to his sister, who died last year.

He says he's never loved anyone in his life, and that the paintings, which he would unpack and admire every evening, were all he had:

"Gurlitt has experienced many goodbyes in his lifetime: his father's death in a car accident, his mother's death, his sister's cancer. 'Saying goodbye to my pictures was the most painful of all,' he says. 'I hope everything will be cleared up quickly, so I can finally have my pictures back.' " 

There is a chance that could happen. German newspaper Focus, which first broke the story about the years-long investigation, says only 590 of the works are considered looted by the Nazis, and that at this point authorities are looking to make a deal with Gurlitt.

You can read the entire Der Spiegel interview here.

SEE ALSO: Why Someone Just Paid $142 Million For A Painting

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Dave Eggers' Frightening Vision Of Where Social Media Could Lead Us

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Guy Fawkes mask

Imagine a world where you could network, pay taxes, and even vote through a single social media profile. Now, imagine if that social media profile was mandatory and your whole life was public.

Such is the world mapped out in Dave Eggers' newest book, "The Circle," which tells the unsettling tale of a planet so enthralled with technology that it practically demands its transformation into a surveillance state. In Eggers' chilling vision of the future, social media leads the world's population to call for the elimination of privacy and gladly place their lives — both real and online — in the hands of a single tech company.

That corporate monstrosity is the Circle, a futuristic blend of Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, but tellingly not Snapchat. According to the creed of the Circle, to delete information is tantamount to committing a crime.

"SECRETS ARE LIES," "SHARING IS CARING," and "PRIVACY IS THEFT" are the Orwellian tenets of the company. To keep something hidden is to steal from another person, as the natural state of information is to be free.

Eggers' novel is part satire, part dystopian fiction, and entirely arresting in that the world it depicts is not so far from our own. The all-encompassing social media profiles created by the Circle, called "TruYou" accounts, are much the same as the Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn profiles we use now. The descriptions of the Circle's massive campus, "vast and rambling, wild with Pacific color" and full of every divertissement imaginable cannot help but evoke the luxurious complexes maintained by Google.

More than anything, though, it is the attitudes and mindsets of the characters in the novel that are troublingly similar to our own. The Circle's users (and, in the novel, that's nearly everyone) require immediate and positive affirmations for every online action they take in the form of "smiles" (an alternative to the Facebook "like"). And they dread the unknown, demanding access to any information related to themselves and also everyone around them.

Thus the Circle's technology aspires to erase any knowledge gap, providing medical wrist monitors that continuously record vital signs and placing tiny "SeeChange" cameras all over the world to give anyone access to footage of any place, any time. Users are quickly subsumed by the products, happily swapping their limited real lives for vibrant and highly visible online experiences.

Eggers is not so much predicting a technology-wrought doom as he is posing a question: How much are we willing to sacrifice for information? The ultimate goal of the Circle, after all, is to create total transparency — to make knowledge "democratically acceptable."

In some ways, the logic of the Circle's leaders is seductively simple. When, they ask, has a secret ever been a good thing? Isn't truth always best? Why shouldn't companies have access to the most precise marketing data available? And would people commit crimes if they knew they were constantly being watched?

At times Eggers' book is painful in its blatant hammering home of its message: through social media, we risk eliminating privacy, engendering groupthink, and giving one tech giant a monopoly on information. There are too many thinly veiled symbols and page-long descriptions that could be reduced to a few paragraphs.

But the fundamental ideas of the book are ones that resonate with our time. After all, who hasn't wasted several hours on Facebook? Who has the patience to wait for a print newspaper when you can get breaking digital updates? How many of us now measure our worth in the numbers of "followers," "friends," and "likes" we accrue online?

Right now, we want it both ways. We want to document our experiences and share part of ourselves with a larger-than-life audience. But we also want privacy, in real life and online. We want Snapchat, with its promise of transience, and a chance to wipe the slate clean.

We don't want information at the cost of privacy. What Eggers fears is that, one day, we will.

SEE ALSO: Everything You Think You Know About Thomas Edison Might Be Wrong

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