Flames Rise as Ship Burned at Viking-Inspired Fire Festival
The annual Viking-inspired fire festival of Up Helly Aa, described by organizers as 'a northern Mardi Gras,' was held in the town of Lerwick in Scotland's Shetland Islands on Tuesday, January 28.
The festival involves a torchlit procession led by a 'Guizer Jarl,' or Chief Viking, and a 'Jarl Squad,' which lights a replica longship by throwing torches into it.
The present form of Up Helly Aa dates back around 140 years, but the traditions of the festival, including the procession and galley-burning, go back '12 centuries or more' and are linked to ancient Norse rituals marking the sun's return after winter, according to Promote Shetland, which helps organize the event.
Before the 19th century, the event was 'often riotous' and law enforcement would be summoned 'to curb trigger-happy drunks firing guns in the air' or to stop people 'dragging a blazing tar barrel through the streets,' they said.
Footage filmed by Mary Domito shows attendees throwing torches into a burning Viking ship. Credit: Mary Domito via Storyful
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
WWE's Jacob Fatu sends heartfelt tribute to R-Truth after release
The post WWE's Jacob Fatu sends heartfelt tribute to R-Truth after release appeared first on ClutchPoints. The news that WWE R-Truth was being released has impacted many, including United States Champion Jacob Fatu, who sent the 54-time Speed Champion a message on social media. Advertisement While he portrays a heel character on TV, Fatu has kind words for R-Truth. He posted his message on X, formerly Twitter, and thanked him for what he had done. 'This is the life right here[,] Use! We do this so our kids don't have to see that other life we come from[,] dawwg!!' his post began. 'God [first], family, laughter, game, love[,] & knowledge always when it came to you! Love & respect[,] Big Bruh & THANK YOU [praying hands and the hundred points emojis].' It is nice to see WWE Superstars rally around R-Truth after he was released, including Jacob Fatu. He clearly made an impact on the locker room, and now they are showing their appreciation. The WWE Universe chanted, 'We want Truth!' throughout the June 2, 2025, edition of Monday Night RAW as well. Why did WWE release R-Truth? Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images. Why WWE released R-Truth is unclear. A wave of releases has occurred over the last couple of days. They also decided not to renew Carlito and Sarah Logan's contracts. Advertisement Releases happen every few months in WWE. In May 2025, Dakota Kai, Cora Jade, and Braun Strowman headlined the last wave of releases. R-Truth was an interesting decision, considering his place in the company. While he is not a main event talent, he has been a staple of WWE TV. He plays a comedic role that frequently gets other wrestlers to break character. He also had one of the top-selling T-shirts on the WWE Shop before his exit. His last feud was with his 'childhood hero,' John Cena. They had a match at the May 2025 edition of Saturday Night's Main Event. Cena is now a heel, so R-Truth came out in Cena-inspired ring gear. His T-shirt parodied Cena's, and R-Truth did his signature run to the ring. Advertisement However, R-Truth lost in a matter of minutes to Cena. It wasn't for the Undisputed WWE Championship, but R-Truth would not have walked out with it either way. Whether or not he ever returns to WWE remains unclear. The fans want him back, and we will have to wait and see if WWE listens to their chants.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
31st Mardi Gras celebration coming to downtown Sioux City
SIOUX CITY, Iowa (KCAU) — Mardi Gras will be returning to downtown Sioux City for the 31st time later this summer. This year's Sioux City Mardi Gras Parade, presented by State Steel, will be taking place on July 3. Story continues below Top Story: OSHA has set fines for workplace death in January Lights & Sirens: Nebraska officials find 25 lbs of drugs during I-80 stop Sports: Local IHSAA State Quarterfinal soccer scoreboard Weather: Get the latest weather forecast here This year's parade features an updated route that will take place along the Riverfront. The parade will start at the Wesley Parkway bridge and head east on Larson Park Road. It will also make its way along the Anderson Dance Pavilion and end at the Chris Larsen Yoga Lawn. The parade will kick off at 6 p.m., and many Mardi Gras bead necklaces will be thrown to crowds during the parade. If you're interested in participating in the parade, registration is still open. You can register by visiting the Tyson Event Center's website, by visiting the Primebank Box Office in person, or by calling 712-279-4850. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Long Island home asking $1.97M has a full-scale '50s diner
This home is an escape — and a portal into another era. From the street, 1 School House Court blends in with its stately Long Island neighbors — with a stone façade, classic colonial symmetry and manicured landscaping in Oyster Bay. But beneath its traditional exterior lies a playful secret: a full-scale 1950s diner and an Ebbets Field-inspired shrine to baseball's golden age. 'I guess I'm an old-school type guy who probably wanted to be born in the '50s,' said homeowner Gus Nunziata, who's now listing the residence for sale. 'But I missed out on that era, so it's been fun to recreate it.' 27 A traditional colonial home in Oyster Bay, Long Island, now listed for $1.97 million, hides a nostalgic surprise beneath its polished surface. Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 A foyer. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman Asking $1.97 million with Douglas Elliman's MaryAnn Clara, the five-bedroom, four-bathroom residence spans 3,752 square feet. The interiors are filled with luxury finishes — coffered ceilings, granite countertops and a sunken family room anchored by a towering gas fireplace. But the real star lies underground. That's where visitors are transported into a chrome-trimmed time capsule — complete with black and white-checkered floors, gleaming red booths, neon signs and a fully operational Wurlitzer jukebox once owned by Jimmy Fallon. 27 The view of the time-warp diner space. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 Homeowner Gus Nunziata spent over two decades curating the retro basement. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 The basement is complete with checkered floors. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman Nunziata, 64, has spent more than two decades curating the retro retreat. When he and his wife built the home in 2002, he specifically asked the builder to dig the foundation deeper to accommodate 10-foot ceilings. 'I wanted it to feel like a real floor, not a basement,' he said. From there, the diner slowly took shape — piece by piece. 'Once we got here, everybody would be giving me things that looked like the '50s, like barber chairs or an old Coke machine,' Nunziata said. 'My wife used to joke and ask, 'What are you going to do with all this junk?' And I said, 'I have a plan.'' 27 The basement offers vintage booths. Gus Nunziata 27 The room can instantly transport visitors to another era. Gus Nunziata 27 A bar with vintage stools. Gus Nunziata 27 A vintage Coke machine. Gus Nunziata That plan evolved into a fully immersive space. Friends contributed items like a vintage barbershop chair from the Bowery in Manhattan, still bearing business cards from the early 1900s. Nunziata installed a wraparound bar, vinyl-upholstered stools and a glass display case filled with period candy. 'Some people collect cars or go gambling,' he said. 'This kind of became my hobby.' One of the most sentimental pieces is a Coca-Cola light fixture hanging above the diner's table area. 'That was actually my father-in-law's light that hung in his restaurant in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the 1950s,' Nunziata said. 27 The Wurlitzer jukebox once owned by Jimmy Fallon. Gus Nunziata 27 Memorabilia includes a barbershop chair from the early 1900s. Gus Nunziata 27 An old cash register from a pharmacy with a patent date stamped on it from 1882. Gus Nunziata The space doubles as an entertainment lounge. There's a movie projector that lowers from the ceiling for screenings and a pool table surrounded by poker paraphernalia. A mural of the Rat Pack — painted by Nunziata's sister-in-law — features an extra member: Nunziata himself, rendered alongside Sinatra and friends. And then there's the second room — a personal homage to Ebbets Field, home of the Brooklyn Dodgers before their westward move. The walls are painted to resemble the stadium's famed scoreboard. There's even green turf flooring and a home plate to complete the illusion. 'I wasn't around when Ebbets Field was around, but my father was a Brooklyn Dodgers fan,' Nunziata said. 'We're Mets fans now, but I had all this sports memorabilia from when I was a kid, and I thought, 'Let me start that game room — my second passion.'' 27 The adjoining game room features turf flooring, a home plate and a hand-painted scoreboard. Gus Nunziata 27 'I guess I'm an old-school guy who wanted to be born in the '50s,' Nunziata said. Gus Nunziata 27 Stadium seats from Shea Stadium Gus Nunziata Over the years, he added salvaged seats from Shea Stadium, Boston Garden and Comiskey Park. 'I joke and say, 'Hey, turns out the Pope was a fan of the White Sox. He may have sat in this seat,'' he laughed. True to form, Nunziata built a wooden façade resembling a vintage ticket booth at the room's entrance. Hanging above it is a sign borrowed from the film 'Field of Dreams': 'If you build it, they will come.' And come they did. The Nunziatas have hosted everything from themed parties to casual family hangouts in the basement over the years. 'The boys had multiple parties down there,' Nunziata said of his kids. 'Every now and then we'd throw a '50s party — people would dress up, we'd serve diner food on plastic trays, and I'd even bring around retro candies from the '50s and '60s.' 27 A view of the scoreboard. Gus Nunziata 27 A game table. Gus Nunziata 27 Signage with Shea and Yankee stadium names. Gus Nunziata 27 A close up of the Coca-Cola machine. Gus Nunziata Even among Oyster Bay's inventory of well-appointed homes, this property stands out for its personal flair and dedication to nostalgia. The listing still emphasizes the main floor's entertaining potential: a chef's kitchen with GE Monogram appliances, a banquet-sized dining room — and a backyard outfitted with a heated saltwater pool, a stone fireplace, a Traeger smoker-equipped BBQ kitchen and multiple lounge areas, including space for a vegetable garden or a dog run. Upstairs, the primary suite features two walk-in closets, a sitting area and a spa-style bathroom with a Jacuzzi tub and a new shower. The laundry room is conveniently located on the second floor, and additional bedrooms are spacious and light-filled. 27 The five-bedroom, four-bathroom home features a gourmet kitchen, a sunken family room and a backyard built for entertaining. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 The kitchen and dining space. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman But it's the downstairs that most often steals the show. 27 The dining room. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 'Every time somebody comes over, I show them the house and they love it,' Nunziata said. 'Then I say, 'Hey, let me show you the basement,' and when you take people down there, they're just blown away. They're like, 'Hey, can I come back and bring my mom and dad? My uncle's a Mets fan — can I take him to see it?'' With his two sons now grown and out of the house, Nunziata is preparing to downsize. He turns 65 this month and says it's time to simplify — though the memories are hard to part with. 'If it was up to my wife, we'd live here forever,' he said. 'But it's just time for something smaller.' 27 One of five bedrooms. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 An ensuite bathroom. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 The loggia. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 The backyard. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman 27 The pool. CHRISTIANO DIGITAL/Courtesy of Douglas Elliman They're staying on Long Island, ideally near their sons in Huntington. The couple also owns a place in Naples, Florida, but their roots remain firmly in New York. As for the future of the diner and field? Nunziata is open to letting it all go with the house — or dismantling it, piece by piece. 'Some of the stuff I'll pass on to my sons, and I'll keep a few things for sentimental value,' he said. 'But there's a lot. Thousands and thousands spent over the years. I don't even have a specific number in my head.' For now, he's hoping a like-minded buyer will fall in love with the fantasy he built. 'I'm hoping someone comes in and says, 'Hey, I'm the type of family that would love to keep that intact,'' Nunziata said. 'And that's great. The legacy will go on.'