Mythbusters and Doro-Dango

November 17th, 2008

(Bigger version!)

This is a clip from a recent Mythbusters episode in which Adam and Jamie are attempting to polish poop. Frustrated with their methodology, Adam goes to a guy named Jason Arnold to learn how to make doro-dango. (And that’s pronounced “dahn-goh,” not “dang-o,” by the way. Wince-worthy, really.) Doro means mud, and dango is a type of small spherical, traditional Japanese sweet. You’d be fine translating it as “mud balls” or “mud dumplings.”

Anyhoo, I first learned of doro-dango via Japan Probe, where a post linked through to Professor Fumiyo Kayo’s English language instruction page at the Kyoto University of Education. It sure seems that they’ve become quite the trend elsewhere since catching the public’s eye a few years ago, thanks to Professor Kayo’s revival efforts. If you’re curious, you can find instructions for how to make doro-dango all over the web. (There’s even a dorodango.com! It’s the personal site of Bruce Gardner.)

Anyway, I found this application fascinating – using the doro-dango method to find out whether or not poop will take a luster. Kind of gross, sure, but kind of a cool cultural, artsy solution, too. What do you think?

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  • Chandlet - did you watch the video? They show you precisely how they polished the poo...
  • chandlet
    How do they make it so shiny.
  • Freedom - I was impressed too. But also a little grossed out. And as weird as it was, I found myself agreeing with the reasoning behind trying different types of dung, too. Weird episode, but quite entertaining. Great show - even when it fails to be rigorously scientific. Ha ha. I think that the freshly polished balls were more shiny than they would be later - as Professor Kayo's page shows. But they definitely laid that one to rest. It is definitely doable.

    Shane - I was really surprised at the variety of looks you can achieve simply by changing the composition of the dirt. They can look like metal or marble, given the right materials. Really cool, huh? (And yet...I think even if I made one and it was beautiful, I'd have to fight what Poe called the Imp of the Perverse, who'd urge me to hurl my pretty sphere to the ground and watch how it came apart. Would it dent? Crumble? Shatter? Crack? Hmmm...)
  • I had read about these before and they can be quite beautiful. I love it that Mythbusters used this Japanese art form to illustrate the point!

    <abbr>Shanes last blog post was: Elvis is Homeless in Japan</abbr>
  • It actually can be done. I am impressed.
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