With so many superhero movies around, such as
Spiderman or Hulk, we are used to see people with special abilities in
fiction. But people with amazing abilities actually do exist in real
life; here's a list of the most amazing of these people!
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The Incredible Brain (Daniel Tammet)
Daniel Paul Tammet is a British high-functioning autistic savant gifted
with a facility for mathematical calculations, sequence memory, and
natural language learning. He was born with congenital childhood
epilepsy. Experiencing numbers as colors or sensations is a
well-documented form of synesthesia, but the detail and specificity of
Tammet's mental imagery of numbers is unique. In his mind, he says, each
number up to 10,000 has its own unique shape and feel, that he can "see"
results of calculations as landscapes, and that he can "sense" whether a
number is prime or composite. He has described his visual image of 289
as particularly ugly, 333 as particularly attractive, and pi as
beautiful. Tammet not only verbally describes these visions, but also
creates artwork, particularly watercolor paintings, such as his painting
of Pi.
Tammet holds the European record for memorising and recounting pi to
22,514 digits in just over five hours. He also speaks a variety of
languages including English, French, Finnish, German, Spanish,
Lithuanian, Romanian, Estonian, Icelandic, Welsh and Esperanto. He
particularly likes Estonian, because it is rich in vowels. Tammet is
creating a new language called Mänti. Tammet is capable of learning new
languages very quickly. To prove this for the Channel Five documentary,
Tammet was challenged to learn Icelandic in one week. Seven days later
he appeared on Icelandic television conversing in Icelandic, with his
Icelandic language instructor saying it was "not human."
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The Boy with Sonar Vision (Ben Underwood)
Ben Underwoodtaught is blind, both of his eyes were removed (cancer)
when he was 3. Yet, he plays basketball, rides on a bicycle, and lives a
quite normal life. He taught himself to use echo location to navigate
around the world. With no guide-dogs, he doesn't even need hands: he
uses sound. Ben makes a short click sound that bounces back from
objects. Amazingly, his ears pick up the ecos to let him know where the
objects are. He's the only person in the world who sees using nothing
but eco location, like a sonar or a dolphin.
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The Rubberboy (Daniel Browning Smith)
Five time Guiness Record holder, The Rubberboy is the most flexible man
alive and the most famous contortionist. He has been in many
professional basketball or baseball games and on The Tonight Show with
Jay Leno, ESPN's Sports Center, Oprah Winfrey, Ripley's Believe It or
Not, Cirque du Soleil, Best Damn Sports Show Period, The Discovery
Channel, Men in Black 2, HBO's Carnivale, and CSI: NY and American got a
talent. He dislocates his arms to crawl through an unstrung tennis
racquet. He performs contortion handstands and unique acrobatics.
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Mister Eat-it-All (Michel Lotito)
Michel Lotito (born 1950) is a French entertainer, famous as the
consumer of undigestables, and is known as Monsieur Mangetout (Mister
Eat-it-all). Lotito's performances are the consumption of metal, glass,
rubber and so on in items such as bicycles, televisions, a Cessna 150,
and smaller items which are disassembled, cut-up and swallowed. The
aircraft took roughly two years to be 'eaten' from 1978 to 1980. He
began eating unusual material while a child and has been performing
publicly since 1966. Lotito does not often suffer from ill-effects due
to his diet, even after the consumption of materials usually considered
poisonous. When performing he consumes around a kilogram of material
daily, preceding it with mineral oil and drinking considerable
quantities of water during the 'meal'. He apparently possesses a stomach
and intestine with walls of twice the expected thickness, and his
digestive acids are, allegedly, unusually powerful, allowing him to
digest a certain portion of his metallic meals.
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King Tooth (Rathakrishnan Velu)
On August 30, 2007, the eve of Malaysia's 50th Independence Day,
Rathakrishnan Velu (or Raja Gigi, as he is known locally) broke his own
world record for pulling train with his teeth, this time with 6 coaches
attached weighing 297.1 tons over a distance of 2.8 metres at the Old
Kuala Lumpur Railway Station. Raja Gigi, from Tampin in Malaysia learned
a technique of concentrating his powers to any part of his body from an
Indian guru at a young age of 14.
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The Man who doesn't Sleep (Thai Ngoc)
Sixty-four-year-old Thai Ngoc, known as Hai Ngoc, said he could not
sleep at night after getting a fever in 1973, and has counted infinite
numbers of sheep during more than 11,700 consecutive sleepless nights.
"I don't know whether the insomnia has impacted my health or not. But
I'm still healthy and can farm normally like others," Ngoc said. Proving
his health, the elderly resident of Que Trung commune, Que Son district
said he can carry two 50kg bags of fertilizer down 4km of road to return
home every day. His wife said, "My husband used to sleep well, but these
days, even liquor cannot put him down." She said when Ngoc went to Da
Nang for a medical examination, doctors gave him a clean bill of health,
except a minor decline in liver function. Ngoc currently lives on his
5ha farm at the foot of a mountain busy with farming and taking care of
pigs and chickens all day. His six children live at their house in Que
Trung. Ngoc often does extra farm work or guards his farm at night to
prevent theft, saying he used three months of sleepless nights to dig
two large ponds to raise fish.
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The Eye-Popping Man (Claudio Pinto)
Claudio Pinto can pop both of his eyes 4 cm (about 1 and a half inch) or
95% out of their sockets. He's now aiming (poppin'?) for a world record.
MrPinto has undergone various tests and doctors say they have never seen
or heard of a person who can pop the eyes as much as him. Mr Pinto, from
Belo Horizonte, said: "It is a pretty easy way to make money. "I can pop
my eyes out four centimetres each, it is a gift from God, I feel
blessed."
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