If an apple a day keeps the doctor away, does learning new facts each day keep boredom at bay?
Alright, I promise I’m not writing a Doctor Seuss-esque story here. But if you’re interested in learning something new, you’ve come to the right place! We’ve got a brand new list of facts from the “Today I Learned” subreddit that will give you something fascinating to talk about at your next dinner party.
Be sure to upvote the facts that you learned from this article, and feel free to share anything else you've recently found out in the comments below. We’re never too old to learn something new, so if you’re interested in continuing your education after finishing this article, you can find some of Bored Panda’s previous “Today I Learned” pieces here, here and here!
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TIL the pet food company Chewy sends flowers and a card when a customer's pet dies. They will reimburse the purchase of unopened food and suggest it be donated to a shelter. They also offer the option of talking to someone about the grief of losing a pet.
TIL that Steve McQueen had a habit of demanding free items, in bulk, from studios, when doing movies, it was later discovered that these items (like electric razors and jeans) went to Boys Republic reformatory school, where McQueen had been, as a teenager.
TIL since its premiere in 1987 the show Unsolved Mysteries has helped locate half of the wanted fugitives it has featured, reunited over 100 lost loves and freed 7 prisoners who were wrongfully convicted. An additional 260+ cases involving murder, missing persons and fraud have also been solved.
Here at Bored Panda, we’re big fans of the Today I Learned subreddit. And clearly, many other people are too. This online community that is dedicated to sharing “interesting and specific facts” about things that people recently learned has over 29 million members. With so many members sharing a wide variety of fascinating facts, there are no limits to the wealth of information we can harness from this page. We are dedicated to being lifelong learners, and if you are too, you’ll certainly enjoy this fun fact filled list.
While memorizing facts might not be the best way to learn if you want to master a subject or skill, it can be a great jumping off point. According to psychology teacher Marc Smith, “Knowing facts helps us to place other problems into context and access higher order thinking skills. If the facts we have memorized are accurate and accessible they can be used in order to give context to other situations, if we cannot recall these facts we are unable to place new problems into context.”
TIL Oscar the Therapy Cat accurately predicted 25 deaths. After this the staff started notifying family members of residents to come say goodbye if Oscar was curled up next to them.
TIL some insomniacs may have nights of "sleep misperception", where it feels like you were awake all night but you actually slept for hours.
TIL In 36BCE, Roman statesman Marcus Varro wrote about germs, describing "minute creatures which cannot be seen by the eyes, which enter the body through the mouth & nose & there cause serious diseases". The germ theory of disease would not be widely accepted for another 1,900 years.
Marc notes that not all learning should be centered around simply memorizing facts, but it should not be completely disregarded either. “Memorizing facts can build the foundations for higher thinking and problem solving,” he notes. “Constant recitation of times tables might not help children understand mathematical concepts, but it may allow them to draw on what they have memorized in order to succeed in more complex mental arithmetic. Memorization, therefore, produces a more efficient memory, taking it beyond its limitations of capacity and duration.”
We all know that it would be impossible to learn everything there is to know about the world, or even most subjects. But our brains are hungry for knowledge, and the more that we soak up, the better off we will be. We can better relate to more people and better understand this complex world we live in if we know even a tiny bit about a wide variety of things.
TIL Sugar does not cause hyperactivity in children. This myth is based on a single 1978 study; no subsequent study has shown a relationship.
TIL During the 2000's, Google, Apple, Adobe, Intel, and several other mega corporations had a mutual agreement not to hire each other's employees in order to keep salaries low. This led to a 400 mil class action lawsuit.
TIL Teddy roosevelt, who is thought of as the national park man, is actually the National forest man. During his presidency he founded 5 of 63 US national parks. As for national forests, he founded 150 of the 154 US national forests!
We are naturally curious beings. As children, we seek to soak up as much information as we possibly can, but somewhere along the way, we sometimes lose this spark. Negative experiences at school or having teachers that suck the life out of every lesson can make us believe that learning is boring. But that’s simply not true. Learning can be about anything! So if you are passionate about playing guitar, writing poetry or woodworking, you still have to dedicate time to learn about those things. But I bet you don’t dread the hours you get to spend educating yourself on those topics because you do it by choice. That’s why “Today I Learned” is so great. Nobody is forcing members to be there or share facts; everyone just genuinely wants to. And when we’re interested in learning, we are much more likely to retain what we’ve read.
TIL that Ben & Jerry's employees are entitled to 3 free pints of ice cream every day.
TIL David Copperfield was once robbed at gunpoint -- but successfully performed an illusion to convince the robbers his pockets were empty when they weren't.
TIL traffic roundabouts, compared to intersections with stop signs or signals, have 37% fewer overall collisions, 75% fewer injury collisions, and 90% fewer fatal collisions.
Except if you are in the US because no one knows how to drive around them properly.
They don't even know how to install them properly. There are some that have stop signs at every entrance, defeating the purpose
Load More Replies...The lower levels of serious injury are due to the fact that the impacts are not at 90° or head on. They are normally at an angle and are glancing blows. Roundabouts are far safer thanks to wider sight lines and you only have to concentrate on the oncoming traffic from one side.
So that's why they keep installing more of the things around here. It certainly benefited a local breeding pair of plovers, which are insanely aggressive and territorial birds who nest on the ground. Now they have a nice grassy turning circle to raise their chicks where those pesky pedestrians never set foot. It's good for us humans too, because the bastards have *spikes* on their wings. (Yes, really).
I grew up in a small suburb (Wake Village TX) with roundabout but we have always called it "The Circle." That's how it's known. I didn't even know "roundabout" was the actual name of it until about two years ago thanks to Apple Maps. I'm 53. The town was built to support an army base & ammunition plant during the 40s. Supposedly all of the original streets were designed in a rose shape so that if enemy planes flew over they wouldn't think it was a town. The Circle was the center of the rose.
Well, "circle" is also the "actual name" here in the USA. Early examples are Monument Circle in Indianapolis and Columbus Circle in NYC. We adopted "roundabout" from the British. For the most part, that began in the '90s when "modern roundabouts" were introduced here. (As similar as they appear, there's a technical difference in their design.)
Load More Replies...Except in the US where laws for roundabouts differ FROM STATE TO STATE. In New York the people IN the circle of the right of way. In New Jersey, the people ENTERING the circle have the right of way.
I don't know what the stats are on the one in Warwick, RI, where I live, but it is like driving through a maze. There are yield signs everywhere and more arrows in the roadway than you can possibly pay attention to and still drive safely. I'll sit through a red light any day compared to driving through that thing!
Every traffic circle around Las Vegas NV shows MASSIVE amounts of tire skid marks, broken plants and debris from accidents. This is NOT a statistic from the Nevada.
American here: I hate these things. We have exactly two in my city and I almost never go to those intersections because they aren't on my way. They increase my anxiety level something awful. At least one of those roundabouts has two lanes going around it, not one and you are expected to merge and watch for others the whole damn way around. And, as it has been stated, AMERICANS CAN BARELY DRIVE ANYWAY & ADDING UNFAMILIAR INTERSECTION "OBSTACLES" JUST MAKES US WORSE!
Omg, for the love people 😩 please don't take your narrow capabilities and then try to blanket the rest of the U. S. with them. I for one am a competent driver who get this... knows how to drive around a circle, also I can do most repairs on a car unless they involve alot of electronics. What!!! 🤯🤯🤯 crazy i know! If you are so inept then perhaps do the rest of us a favor and cut up your license because if you cannot get the concept of when to yield and when to go, then I'm sorry but you shouldn't drive. This isn't just for you, this is everybody that's said the same thing as you on this thread
Load More Replies...I am not ashamed to say that they have started puttin them in downtown okc and they confuse the cráp out of me.
Iowan (US) here ... I live in the capital city and it has only been within the last 5 or so years that they started making them common place and only then in the growing suburbs where new construction is happening. Ngl, I was thoroughly confused and HATED them at first. Now I love 'em. Just gotta learn how they work
Interesting fact,the worlds first mini roundabout was built in my home town of Benfleet in Essex UK.
Ugh, I hate roundabouts. I'll purposely go a different route just to avoid them, if possible.
They are being built at a very quick rate up here in the Pacific Northwest.. well the cities north of Seattle. I live in Marysville, WA and they are popping up everywhere. They keep traffic moving and are very efficient IMO.
I have no idea why people think that they are problems. You just go im the right direction. There are exits. Same way as at the crossroads. You just find a free slot to get in the carousel and exit it. It is not a rocket science.
They installed 2 near my office a few years ago, so I regularly pass through the same ones. Makes me nuts how people treat them like 4-way stops, or worse start speeding up as they approach and blow through them regardless of how many cars may already be in the round. I live in southeastern US, and we are just terrible drivers.
Load More Replies...First got introduced to roundabouts when stationed with the American Air Force in England in the early 70s, and loved them. My small town here in western North Carolina, and a lot of people here do nothing but complain about them rather than learning how to drive on them.
I always expected those three-wheeled Reliant Robins to tip sideways when zipping around.
Load More Replies...And 100% more frustration because people don't know right-of-way rules.
There was an experiment in the Netherlands I think where they removed the traffic lights from a very busy intersection maybe 20k plus cars a day and bike paths, pedestrian crossings and such. The traffic flowed much smoother and there was a dramatic reduction in the number of accidents, something like a 20 times reduction and far less road rage. It was all based on the requirement to be more aware of actions in the intersection due to the unpredictability of other drivers actions
They installed a bunch of these around the outdoor mall area near me. Anytime we are in one and there are other drivers, someone is messing up everything for the rest of us. And one day we were about to start in on one and a huge truck drove right through the whole thing. Bouncing over curbs and everything. The middle was just some really nice greenery and plants so it probably didn't cause any damage but just destroyed the lil garden. After that they installed a bunch of very large boulders and posts like they have in front of grocery stores and not just that roundabout, all of them got the bulky makeover. I have a feeling that wasn't the only roundabout that guy drove through.
In the States the solution to traffic circles is to drive right down the middle.
In the US they're often installed in places where there would normally not be any traffic incidents in the first place.
We have a lot of them in the UK. They're often turned into gardens with flowers.
except in France, some having priority on the right or not, surprise surprise !!!!!!
Unless it's Massachusetts, in which case the rotary is the most dangerous intersection in the state. (Bell Circle and Brown Circle, both in Revere.)
You neglected to mention the Bourne Rotary death match access to the Cape!
Load More Replies...Thing about roundabouts is they come with yield signs, which in some parts of the US are considered a suggestion.
Add bicycle lanes to the outside of the roundabout and you get an increase in collisions.
If you need some motivation to help you understand why we should never end our education, we’ve consulted this article from Genashtim. The first reason they note for how learning continuously benefits us is that it helps us generate new ideas. A body in motion stays in motion, and a brain in motion does just the same thing. When we stimulate our brains with new ideas and new information, we are hungry for even more. It is great for us to be exposed to new ideas and new facts all the time. Even if you don’t realize it while reading through this list, you’re giving your brain an even bigger appetite for knowledge!
TIL in 1912 4 yr-old Bobby Dunbar disappeared, was found eight months later in Mississippi with a couple that refuted that it was him. Courts ordered the boy to live with the Dunbars. 100 years later DNA verified that the boy was Bruce Anderson and had been wrongly identified by Dunbar's parents.
TIL NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar agreed to appear in the movie "Airplane!" on the condition he be paid $35,000.. the exact price of a rug he wanted to purchase.
TIL about Giles Corey, who was accused of witchcraft during the Salem trials. He used a legal loophole and refused to plea, which meant he couldn't be tried. He was then tortured to death, but still refused to plea, allowing his children to claim their inheritance.
Learning also helps keep our passions alive. It can be easy to become stagnant or forget how much you enjoy certain hobbies or activities, but there is always more to be learned! It is silly to assume that we know all there is to know about anything, and especially when it comes to topics we are captivated by, we should never want to stop learning. This also helps us in our social lives, as we’ll never run out of things to discuss. If you meet someone who has very different interests than you, you can still find common ground if you know even a tiny bit about their passions. The more you know about, the better you can relate to others and find ways to connect and relate to them. So in a way, today you're also learning how to be a better friend!
TIL that the geologist Michel Siffre spent 2 months underground without time cues to study how his body clock adapted, repeated the experiment for even longer on himself and more subjects, and discovered that their bodies tended to switch to a 48-hour clock. In one case, one even slept 34 hours.
TIL Marjoe Gortner is an Evangelical preacher who decided to pull the curtain back on the scams he and other preachers used. He invited a crew to film behind the scenes as he revealed tricks of the trade and the sacks full of cash he earned nightly. It won the '72 Academy Award Best Documentary.
TIL certain species of wild oats are able to walk. They have a pair of 'legs' called awns which flex and make the seeds crawl around, to find an ideal place to plant itself.
We should never underestimate the power of learning, even when it comes to how it can benefit our health. Learning new skills has been linked to various mental health benefits, including lower rates of depression and anxiety, higher levels of optimism, self-esteem and life satisfaction and greater abilities to cope with stress. It can also help prevent or delay age-related mental decline, such as Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. Perhaps learning a new fact a day can actually keep the doctor away after all.
TIL in an effort to protect her son and daughter from falling under the sinister charms of Charles Manson, Angela Lansbury relocated her family from LA to Ireland. Describing Ireland as “free from bad influences”, she then refused work to better support their recovery from heroin addiction.
That headline is poorly written. AL upped stakes AFTER her addict daughter was swept up in charismatic cult lead by Charles M. And moved her two heroin addicted young adult children to Cork, Ireland and then stuck by them refusing to work until both her offspring were safely in recovery!!! Frankly BP that tagline is misleading to the point of making AL sound silly and selfish!
TIL Abraham Lincoln signed the bill creating the Secret Service on April 14, 1865, the day he was assassinated.
TIL about bank robber and kidnapper Vassilis Palaiokostas who is known as the "Greek Robin Hood" for giving away most of his stolen millions to the poor. He escaped by helicopter from the same maximum security prison twice while serving a 25 year sentence and remains at large despite a €1m bounty.
As kids, many of us tried to rush through our education to move onto the next stage of life, but the reality is that life itself is a constant form of schooling. Iulian Ionescu wrote in his blog post “The Simple Answer To Why You Should Never Stop Learning”, “Everyone wants to be finished with school so that they can start their ‘real’ life. I think that’s a distorted view. Life doesn’t consist exclusively of your skills, knowledge, and wisdom. There are vast parts of your character that you don’t even touch in school. For all intents and purposes, you are not a fixed person. No matter how much you’d like to think that you are finished growing, time will change you. Events will change you. The world will change and evolve around you.”
TIL the car coordinator of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood managed to locate the exact 1959 Ford driven by the Manson Family, but a replica was used instead because the idea of having the real Manson car was considered too creepy.
TIL Wheat and Barley were ancient Egyptian pregnancy tests. A woman would urinate on bags of barley and wheat and if they sprouted, she was likely pregnant. A 1963 study found that this was accurate ~70% of the time.
TIL that Pope Innocent VIII was breastfed while he was on his deathbed, as that was the only thing he could eat or drink.
As my mother used to ask me every afternoon upon getting home from school, “What did you learn today?” Hopefully many things already! Keep upvoting the fun facts that blow your mind, and feel free to share even more in the comments. We can never truly be bored, pandas, if we’re always expanding our knowledge. And if you want to read some more articles featuring fun facts from “Today I Learned”, you can find several more here, here and here!
TIL the vocals for the Gnarls Barley song "Crazy" (2006) were recorded in one take. Not only that, it was the first time singer CeeLo Green ever tried singing the lyrics. The song topped the charts in many countries and peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100.
TIL Boeing built an entire fake town on top of their Seattle area factory during WW2.
TIL TGI Fridays stopped requiring employees to wear flair after Office Space came out and customers began making jokes about the flair.
TIL that US Navy sailor's love of ice cream in world war II was so great that in 1943 the navy purchased an 'ice cream barge' to act as a mobile ice cream making factory for sailors and marines. The barge was capable of producing 10 gallons of ice cream every 7 minutes.
TIL that Ticketmaster was caught recruiting resellers to scalp its own tickets.
TIL that during the looting of the Chinese imperial palace at the end of the 2nd Opium War, the British soldiers took a Pekingese dog to gift to Queen Victoria. She named it "Looty".
TIL Emperor Hirohito of Japan was given the original print of the Disney short Lambert the Sheepish Lion, after it was learned it was his favourite Disney film.
TIL World War II codebreaker Dilly Knox used to solve coded enemy messages in the bathtub and persuaded his superiors to have a bathtub installed in his office in the cryptanalysis section of the British Admiralty.
TIL Physiologist Giles Brindley, in 1983 presented his treatment for erectile disfunction by injecting himself before his talk and dropping his pants to show the crowd of urologists.
TIL Mel Gibson originally intended for The Passion of the Christ to have no subtitles, despite the film being entirely in Latin, Hebrew and Aramaic.
Gene Roddenberry originally wanted to film Star Trek in Esperanto, with subtitles.
TIL that there was a 60s band named Nirvana that tried to sue the 90s band for having the same name as them. They wanted to cover them after that, but the project was scrapped due to Kurt Cobains death.
I have several albums by the first Nirvana, and they are quite good and very original.
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