1. Area 51
This military facility, located north of Las Vegas, is reputed to have harbored life and extraterrestrial technology. Be it true or false, no one who does not belong to the US government. Knows what's in there.
2. Royal Air Force Radar
This military facility located in the English countryside can only access members of the US National Security Agency. And members of ECHELON, an international organization comprised of spy agencies, also known as "Five Eyes".
3. Island of Niihau (Hawaiian archipelago)
This island, of 180 km2 of surface and 130 regular inhabitants, has not had diplomatic relation with the West since 1915. Hardly a westerner can accede to it if it is not by express invitation of one of its settlers.
4. Bermuda triangle
Is a geographic area with an equilateral triangle located in the Atlantic Ocean between the Bermuda Islands, Puerto Rico and the American city of Miami (in the state of Florida). By joining these three points with an imaginary line a triangle of about 1600 to 1800 km of side is formed, and an area of approximately 1.1 million km2.
The term was created in 1953, by several writers who published articles in magazines about the presumed danger of the zone. However, US Coast Guard statistics do not indicate that there are more disappearances of ships and airplanes in that area than in other areas of equal trafficking.
5. Svalbard global seed vault
This giant silo has more than 250 million specimens of seeds of all kinds of crops, in order to reinvent agriculture in the event of a devastating global catastrophe. Although it is thought to save humanity, access is strictly forbidden.
1. Waterslide tester
While we wished it were a higher demand position, it seems that the waterslide tester positions come about once in a blue moon. Sebastian Smith, reported as the first waterslide tester, was employed by First Choice holidays in 2013 to travel to the world's water parks and comment on slides and places. This sounds like being paid for on vacation, which is a pretty unbeatable dream job.
2. Netflix tagger
If you’ve never dreamed of getting paid to watch TV, you might not be human. Netflix tagging has brought this dream to the real world. In this position, employees watch content on Netflix, then enter key describing words into the system for each show. By tagging media in Netflix with keywords, it’s easier for users to search for shows they want. Which means you get paid to watch TV and making the world a better place.
3. Chocolate taster
Just about everyone enjoys chocolate in some form of another, but can you imagine getting paid to sample sweet treats all day? Orietta Gianjorio is one of the lucky ones, making her living as a professional chocolate taster.
4. Fortune cookie writer
You've probably opened at least a dozen fortune cookies in your lifetime, but did you ever stop to think about how they're made or where their words of wisdom come from? You may not realize it, but real people actually get paid to write the fortunes inside those cookies you crack open with your takeout.
5. Video game tester
Ever wish you could just skip work to stay home all day and play video games? Good news: You might be able to get paid to do that, if you can get a job as a video game quality assurance tester.The job isn't all fun and games, though ,it's a serious responsibility and requires you to do more than just play a game from start to finish. You have to play through every possibility and find all the bugs and software defects, Time reported. And the reality is, not all games are enjoyable , you may absolutely hate a game and have to play it over and over again to do your job right.
6. Golf ball diver
May seem disgusting but this work gives many employees 25 thousand euros for golf balls and bring them to players or visitors.