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Ripley’s odd warehouse

November 5, 2005

For most people, Ripley is just another synonym for strange. Since Robert Ripley published his first Ripley’s Believe It or Not cartoon nearly a century ago, the company that bears his name has expanded into a major franchise.

One of the company’s signature attractions are its museums, which display the pieces from the Ripley collection of bizarre artifacts. Those include a mural made of postage stamps; the taxidermied head of an elephant with two trunks; and the world’s most expensive limousine.

While awaiting display at one of the 26 Ripley museum locations around the world, pieces sit in an Orlando, Fla., warehouse about the size of a football field. Christopher Elliott tours this way station of the weird with its keeper, Edward Meyer. (National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Saturday)

Listen to the story.

Christopher Elliott is the author of Scammed: How to Save Your Money and Find Better Service in a World of Schemes, Swindles, and Shady Deals. Critics have called it “eye-opening” and “inspiring” — it’ll “grab your attention and won’t let go.” Order your copy now on Amazon, Barnes & Noble or iTunes.

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