“2,055 Brown Recluse Spiders Were Collected”: 30 “Today I Learned” Facts, From Shocking To Cool
Learning something new every day can be surprisingly fun, especially when it’s you who decides what topic to focus on each day. Chances are, you already find yourself delving deeper into the topics you never knew you were interested in (for instance, the Bajau people, considered to be the best free-divers in the world) at times, arguably at least partially thanks to the internet.
It’s true – thanks to the online world, learning has never been easier, and one of the things that illustrates it best is the ‘Today I Learned’ subreddit, brimming with fun facts about any and every topic there is. If you’re curious to see what kind of facts the community focuses on, scroll down to find some of them on the list below, and make sure to upvote the most fascinating things you learned from the community today.
If you scroll down, you will also find Bored Panda’s recent interview with an associate professor of history at Southern Utah University, Dave Lunt, who was kind enough to share his views on learning and even some stories about one of the most knowledge-hungry people ever lived.
This post may include affiliate links.
Heath Ledger refused to present the Oscars in 2007 after he and Jake Gyllenhaal were asked to make fun of their "Brokeback Mountain" characters' romance.
As admirable as this is, I even more admire the approach of Adam Driver, hosting one of the Saturday Night Live event. He took the stage and started talking....and blabbing... and chatting and at the very end he mentioned something along "and here they wanted to air a transphobic sketch but I just dragged on to not let that happen." Legend 😎👏🏻 https://youtu.be/VEvAUeq8Z7o?si=6XKbso7fZ1Dwb4qu. Comment at around 3:50min but all of it is worth watching.
It's great to also laud Adam Driver, but it seems like you're just trying to lower the value and diminish what Heath Ledger did by telling the Adam Driver story HERE, on an entry about Heath Ledger. This entry isn't about Adam Driver. It seems disrespectful to Heath Ledger's memory to say something that is basically "cool story bro, but let me tell you about the time Adam Driver was even COOLER..."
Load More Replies...Walk a mile in another's shoes. Put some thought into it, it will make a better man of you.
Load More Replies...
During the siege of Leningrad during World War II, 28 scientists chose to die of hunger while protecting the seed vault at the Vavilov Institute rather than eating the seeds.
They agreed amongst themselves that no one would go into the vault alone so no one would have to resist the temptation. I have read that at least one scientist died at their desk.
2024 is the year the US Dept of Health and Human Services banned hospitals from performing non-consensual breast, pelvic, prostate, and rectal exams for “educational and training purposes” by medical students and practitioners on patients under anesthesia.
Doctors were still operating on infants without anaesthesia until the mid 1980's. Humans are a bit stupid and slow on the uptake.
Load More Replies...I'm sorry, I think I read that wrong. Does that say f*****g 2024???
It doesn't mean it wasn't already illegal and covered under other laws.
“I think it goes without saying for most people that learning is a vital part to being human, whether we call it formal education, ‘life lessons’, gaining experience, acquiring wisdom, or anything else,” Assoc. Prof. of history at Southern Utah University Dave Lunt said, discussing the importance of learning with Bored Panda.
“From the time we are babies, people are learning about their world. And I believe that we never stop learning, although we often go from formal learning to informal learning when we leave school (at whatever age, at whatever level). I would like to think that people remain hungry to learn throughout their lives, but—of course—this is not always the case. Sometimes, as we get older, we grow complacent in our conclusions and our beliefs, but I think one of the goals of formal education is to inspire students to remain ‘lifelong learners’ after they complete formal studies.”
The sound a whip makes when you crack it is caused by a sonic boom created when the tip of a whip moves faster than the speed of sound. The whip was also the first man made object to break the sound barrier.
Crusty bread and biscuits also break the sound barrier. I don't know if they pre-date the whip or not.
The first sentence is a fact. The second sentence is conjecture, and an example of how facts can get skewed by the person relating them, sometimes with a hidden agenda. Like how certain politicians claim Haitian immigrants eat pets - Maybe one did, but certainly not all of them. Regarding the whip: It's most likely that the whip, the leather thing with a stiff handle, is a refinement of something earlier. I'd guess the first 'man made' object (as in, modified by a human) that made this cracking noise was a vine that some kid removed the leaves from and started swinging around. Such a vine wouldn't last long being used that way, so a whip is a tool built to last longer.
Low pressure area, but not anything approaching a vacuum.
Load More Replies...
In 200 CE, Roman Emperor Septimius Severus banned all female gladiatorial combat, reportedly after hearing such lewd jokes directed at women in an athletic contest that he feared the sport bred disrespect for all women.
A Classic even now. The men get excited, so the women have to stop doing things men are allowed to do.
Yes, but then again, fewer gladiators is almost always a good thing
Load More Replies...Honestly, bad response, but classic issue. Still happens today. Female athletes are sexualized at the cost of their sport. Just look at mens vs womens uniforms.
Men harassing women each generation has continued and probably started long before that.
Said that twice babes, calm down, so excited over the transes
Load More Replies...I would imagine by how they presented. As it was non of his buisness what was between their legs.
Load More Replies...Go donate your hard earned income to the billionaire
Load More Replies...Lunt noted that there are lots of different ideas about what the goal of education should be, from securing a good job, to inspiring responsible citizenship or living a “good" life. “One of my favorite characters from history is Socrates; at least the version of Socrates that we learn about from his student, Plato. Socrates is a good example to me of what a ‘lifelong learner’ might look like,” he shared.
“In 399 BCE, Socrates was put on trial in ancient Athens, and Socrates's speech at that trial is called his Apology. Socrates's Apology—as told by Plato—is not him saying ‘I'm sorry’, but the word refers to Socrates's defense for his actions. Socrates annoyed a lot of people, I'm sure, by constantly asking questions and poking holes in people's assumptions, but at his trial he offered one of the best justifications for learning that I know of. Socrates made no apology for his curiosity. He told the jury of Athenians that ‘the unexamined life is not a life worth living’.
“The word usually translated as ‘unexamined’ is ἀνεξέταστος, and it means something like ‘not looked into’ or ‘not inquired into’. It may not be exactly what Socrates meant, but I like to think of this sentence as a reminder to always be examining my own life, my beliefs, what I know, and what I'm learning,” Lunt explained, adding another interesting fact to our ‘Today I Learned’ list.
During WW2 the Nazis spent the modern day equivalent of 100 million usd to make a underground base in Poland which saw little to no use. Soon after building it they lost the war, and it is now one of the largest bat habitats in Europe.
And something positive that came from the Nazis!
Load More Replies...It adds up, Hitler was bat c**p crazy and now bats c**p in his underground base.
The loudest shout ever recorded was by a primary school teacher who yelled ‘quiet!’ It was clocked at 121.7 decibels and the record has stood for 30 years.
I looked at the article and they shouted quiet but not at school at one of those record competitions. They might of done it before at school but it wasn’t recorded
Load More Replies...A.few months before I started teaching, I started to practice loudly saying "hey." What's funny is I practiced st the mall (I'm so old) with the kids (10-16) and they stopped doing whatever it was, running, yelling. I got really good with it and I'm still amazed how well it works.
The teacher in question is irish i believe and being from belfast myself i can 100% confirm we have some of the loudest women in the world. Would put a banshee to shame some of them
Dana Carvey underwent heart bypass surgery for a blocked coronary artery, but the surgeon operated on the wrong artery. Eventually he won a lawsuit against the hospital and won 7.5 million dollars, all of which was donated to charity.
Dana as president Bush is awesome! And that bit with him doing John Lennon and Paul McCartney in today's world just shooting the s**t is awesome!
As Assoc. Prof. Lunt mentioned, quite often learning extends way beyond graduating school or university. Some people are so curious, they never stop learning, and Socrates was seemingly one of such people.
“Of course there are more ways to learn than merely sitting in a classroom or listening to a teacher. Going back to Socrates, he very famously was not a paid teacher. He didn't work in a school. But he was extremely curious and always hungry to learn. In one of Plato's dialogues, Socrates asks another philosopher named Phaedrus to forgive him for his many questions, since he (Socrates) is ‘φιλομαθὴς’ (philomathes), which translates more-or-less to ‘a lover-of-learning’ [or ‘fond of learning’],” the expert noted.
“If someone like Socrates, who was so smart and had many people looking to him as a teacher, was eager to learn, that drives home to me the importance of curiosity and inquiry. The world is a big place, with a lot of knowledge in it. We would all do well to learn as much as we can, whether it is in school, on-the-job, or ‘life lessons.’ There is always something out there for a curious person to learn.”
In the Movie "Scream" (1996) there is a section in the credits saying "No Thanks whatsoever to the Santa Rosa city school district governing board" Santa Rosa revoked permissions to film there last minute and cost the production 350,000$.
The Santa Rosa city school district thought like P.T. Barnum, “There’s no such thing as bad publicity,”
The "S" in "Harry S. Truman" wasn't an abbreviation. The dude's middle name was literally just the letter S.
When she retired & signed up for Social Security, my grandma had to get a copy of her birth certificate. She found out that her name was NOT "Nancy Louise" as she'd always used. It was "N. Louise" because someone hadn't put down the full name. We teased her that her marriage license was invalid and she'd lived in sin with my grandfather for 45 years.
Anecdotal from my dad - He didn't have a middle name, so the Army gave him one. There was another man in his unit with the same name and they differentiated between them this way. What's so odd is that my dad's name was one of the most unique (very Biblical and ancient) ones I've ever heard to begin with and to think that there were TWO of them and both with no middle name. May just be a story to explain away why he chose himself a middle name in the military, but I thought it was rather cool. LOL.
No it was kind of a big thing to do mainly for baby girls in the middle USA, the plan being that after they married they would replace the single letter with their maiden name. In trumans case, IIRC both of his grandfathers were named starting with an S so in order to represent both they just did S.
Load More Replies...My Grandpas middle name is Jr. Whoever filled out the birth certificate misunderstood that the Jr. was mentioned because he is named after his father. It's not his middle name.
My dad. Also had only a middle initial. He didn't have any middle initial on his birth certificate, but when he went into the military they assigned him one. That's kind of the way that used to do it
My Father-in-law only had, for a middle name, an initial, not an actual name.
I would much prefer that. I don't technically have a middle name so much as a first name-family lineage-surname.
A 2022 California Supreme Court decision allowed bumble bees to be considered a protected species because they met the state’s legal definition of a “fish”.
The mind boggles at how broad the definition of a fish must be, obviously living in water isn't one of the requirements
What about the madness that resulted in the fact that it could NOT become an protected species WITHOUT being a kind of fish? Wtf!
Load More Replies...The Catholic Church once classified beavers as fish so they could be eaten during Lent.
I know, right ? Honey bee right there.... Lots of pics of Bumble bees on the internet I bet they could have used instead.....🤦
Load More Replies...how lazy is bored panda to not find one image of billions that exist of an actual MFing bumble bee..............
Bored Panda just pick random pictures out of a desk drawer somewhere. If it matches one word, they post whatever they pull out or a drawer. I wonder if there is even a person involved in selecting pictures.
Load More Replies...Bumble Bees are so important to our food chain, they should be protected at all cost. If they need a loophole to do it, I'm fine with that.
Hey, call them a "bird", a "reptile", a "president"...whatever it takes to protect them!!
Bumble bees are an incredibly important part of the ecosystem, any way to protect them is worth talking!
Discussing the internet’s influence on people’s willingness to or interest in learning nowadays, Lunt pointed out that it sure makes it easier to find information. “I am Generation X, so firmly in middle age, and I remember life before the internet pretty well. Even today, I am consistently amazed at how easy it is to find basic information on the internet – trivia, names, dates, things like that. I spent a lot of hours in college digging through books, flipping through pages, trying to remember where I had read or seen some fact or idea. Now all of that is readily available with a few keystrokes and a search engine.”
A clown saved 300 children during the deadliest avalanche in history. Only 400 people survived out of around 18,000 in the town of Yungay, Peru. The children were attending a circus and a clown led them to higher ground moments before the avalanche destroyed the entire town.
I can only assume this means that an incredibly high number of those children were made into orphans during that avalanche :( It is wonderful that they survived, but how bittersweet their survival must have been for them.
Does anyone have a link to this story? I would like to read about this. I googled this and the two articles I read didn't mention anything about this incident. So if anyone has more information on this incident or has a link, I would appreciate it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970_Huascar%C3%A1n_debris_avalanche
Load More Replies...
In world war 2, English soldiers would use passwords that had sounds that the language of the people they where fighting against did not have, so that they could tell if an unidentified person was an enemy soldier tying to infiltrate them by if they said these sounds correctly.
Nothing unique. We have a similar story in Flanders, for 1302. The sentence was "schild en vriend", as the prononciation of the "sch" in Dutch is difficult to master for "outsiders" and is even different in different regions and dialects. Just look up the word "Shibboleth" in Wikipedia. That's about this is age old language trick.
I know in the Netherlands, they used to catch German spies by getting them to say "Scheveningen" (which is an area of The Hague) that is pretty much impossible to say correctly if you're not a native Dutch speaker.
Load More Replies...I recall some British pilots used rhyming slang as it sounded like gibberish to Nazi translators.
This goes back to Biblical times. This happened with the judge Japhthah. Jephthah was a Gileadite. Gilead fought the tribe of Ephraim. Ephraim lost. Gilead captured a bridge. When any Ephraim tried to cross they had to say Shibboleth. If they couldn't produce it right, they were killed. You read this at Judges 12:4-6.
I would have died pretty quickly in WWII since I have no idea who won any world series game
Back then people didn’t have the ability to isolate themselves from mass media. A series game was probably on every radio in a neighborhood and a large topic of conversation.
Load More Replies...Could they be talking about the code talkers? It wasn't just passwords, it was a whole way of communicating using Native American speakers.
No, it's about pass codes to certain areas that were used to suss out spies using words that were difficult for non-native speakers to pronounce. I believe the American word was lollapalooza, because non-native English speakers would have difficulty with the rolling l's.
Load More Replies...
US president Benjamin Harrison was widowed while in office in 1892. Four years later, Harrison married his dead wife's niece and had a daughter with her. His adult children who were around 40 years old, were horrified that their father married their cousin and didn't attend the wedding.
I'm honestly more surprised that his kids were horrified than anything. That kind of marriage - both the December/May aspect and the marrying a relative of the dead spouse aspect - were pretty common in our history.
And this is the ancestor of the Harrison family of p_a_wn stars, they found out
Nearly 40, she was around the same age as his children
Load More Replies...“I suppose that psychologists and educators and lots of other smart people are studying the effects of the internet on human learning, education, memory, and other fields,” the historian continued. “But for me, the advent of the internet has made it easier to find facts and yet made it more difficult to think originally and creatively. Curating a limitless trove of information, some of it accurate, some of it inaccurate, is an impossible task and so, with the internet, ‘learning’ (for me) has shifted to interpretation of sources, understanding cause-and-effect, assessing reliability, and similar processes.
“So, of course, the internet has made it so very easy to learn something new each day; especially via curated and interesting outlets. However, by the same token, the internet has made it easy for inaccurate or incomplete information to spread.
“Internet sites often offer interpretations that deserve more scrutiny, or opinions disguised as facts. This, I think, makes it all the more important for us to remain ‘lifelong learners’ in order to interpret information and assess reliability, and to be willing to update our conclusions when new information emerges. The internet is an enormously consequential and important tool for learning, but we shouldn't let it do our thinking for us,” Lunt emphasized.
Tom Sawyer author Mark Twain invented the clasps commonly used on women’s bras.
He brought adventure and wonder to teenagers with Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, then he left them in total frustration with a simple fastener!
Forefinger and thumb, an easy skill to master! I'm very much no longer a teenager though.
Load More Replies...The guy was REALLY into gadgets and bankrupted himself at least once by investing in some new invention that bombed.
He didn't intend for them to be used for bras, but he did invent the clasp type itself XD "Over the course of his life, he registered three patents: the first, in 1871, was for an 'Improvement in adjustable and detachable straps for garments,' meant to be an alternative to suspenders, which Clemens apparently found uncomfortable."
Load More Replies...Some, if not many, of his friends called him Mark. Pen name is more accurate.
Load More Replies...
Dictator Muammar Gaddafi had a strange obsession with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. He had Libya's most famous composer write her a song called "Black Flower in the White House." A photo album full of pictures of her was also found next to his bed by opposition fighters.
To be fair, she is an accomplished pianist, smart as a whip, and as refined a woman there is.
And the Republicans really missed a bet by not at least proposing her as a VP candidate.
Load More Replies...
Pirates and buccaneers sometimes engaged in "matelotage", a practice in which male couples would agree to share their incomes and inherit their partner's property in the case of their death.
it was like a gay marriage without the marriage and gay part.
Load More Replies...I always used to think "Matelot" was pronounced "mate a lot", not "mat low".
This was more common than many people would realise. When it came to homosexuality and transgenderism (is that a word?), pirates were far more accepting than so-called civilised people. There were a number of pirates who had become outcasts from "polite society" because of their sexuality. Well known pirates who were openly in same-sex relationships include; Robert Culliford, John Swann, Anne Bonny, Mary Read and Bartholomew Roberts
Summing it up, Assoc. Prof. Lunt suggested that having a learning mindset is one of the most important assets that people can have today, especially younger people who are looking for careers and starting out on their paths in life. “Being a learner shows humility – nobody knows all of the answers but we don't always like to admit it. Even Socrates famously announced at his trial that the only thing he really knew was that he didn't know anything.”
The native language of the volcanic island Manam Motu has no words for cardinal directions (North, East, West, South). Instead, it uses polar coördinates—with words meaning “towards the volcano”, ”towards the sea”, “clockwise around the volcano”, and “counterclockwise around the volcano”.
Doesn't mean they don't have a word for that direction
Load More Replies...Yes. "Mauka" means towards the mountains. "Makai" means towards the sea. "Windward" means toward the side that gets the trade winds. "Leeward" means towards the side that does not get the trade winds. "Townbound" means towards Honolulu. "Diamond Head bound" means towards Diamond Head. Etc. This is because none of the streets align in any cardinal direction. Only exception is "North Shore".
Load More Replies...
Four of the last 7 Illinois Govenors have been jailed.
Only one of the last 46 presidents has been jailed….oh wait, this will be next year’s fact
America is corrupt, they make it hard for voters in poorer areas to get to a polling station & discredit postal votes. Almost like they have an agenda..
It's also 4 out of 43 Illinois Governors have been jailed but that just doesn't sound as shocking.
And teach me to read properly?? This is for another post, I haven't figured out how to delete this yet. 🤦♀️🤦♀️
Load More Replies...I always thought Illinois and Louisiana were in some sort of competition
During World War II, US comedian Redd Foxx dodged the draft by eating half a bar of soap before his physical, a trick that resulted in heart palpitations.
That's what the other half of the soap was for, in case the heart palpitations didn't work. ;)
Load More Replies...You need pencils hanging from your nose, pants on your head and say , wibble. (If you know, you know.)
I guess he had to eat a half of a bar of soap five times.
Load More Replies...
Earth's magnetic field was approximately twice as strong in Roman times as it is now.
False. Totally false, sorry. Earth's magnetic field is currently weakening, but fluctuates randomly.
So if one of the random fluxes was twice as strong during Romans times, this may not be false.
Load More Replies...Apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education...
Load More Replies...It has flipped many times in earth history, but since it's never been observed it's not known if there is a gradual weakening before before the flip, or just a sudden change.
There's the spiral-down theory, that it shifts over hundreds of years of years in a spiraling pattern and then stabilizes on the opposite side.
Load More Replies...Which means in 2000 years there won't be any magnetic field? It swaps direction every couple of billion of years, though
There has been many magnetic field flips before. It roughly flips around every 300 thousand years. And the last one happened 780 thousand years ago. We are way overdue for a flip. https://youtube.com/shorts/IayvE_jFgrc?si=TlPmuB-K03UNlCCQ
Load More Replies...Dude, you know what they meant. "Roman times" = the period of time when the Roman Empire rose to and maintained power.
Load More Replies...
In 1853, linguist and explorer Richard Francis Burton disguised himself as a Muslim and made the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca which is required of all Muslims. He later wrote a book about his experiences.
Did anyone else think this was Freddy Mercury at first? I can't be the only one
Since Muslim people are of every race, ethnicity, and culture how does one disguise oneself as Muslim? Does OP mean wore traditional robes?
This happened in 1853, not within the last few decades. Burton was born in England and was Anglo-Irish. He would have looked very, very "white". In the 1800s most Muslim people would be what we would (now) consider/refer to as Arabs, Pashtuns, Persians, and Levantine peoples. Burton likely darkened his skin tone (and possibly his hair/beard) and donned traditional Muslim clothing. He even had himself circumcised in order to truly maintain his disguise as a Muslim. Again, this happened in the mid-1800s, not recently. The Muslim faith is much more widespread across many ethnicities and countries now; back then it was not.
Load More Replies...I've read the book. It is excellent, informative and very readable. I totally recommend it.
He cut paper into 2X2 inch pieces so he could secretly transcribe conversations he had - he would have been executed had he been caught. 1)He was the first non-Muslim to enter Medina 2)He spoke 27 languages and many dialects (when visiting the US, he used his time on the train to learn Sioux) 3)The movie Mountains of the Moon is a good movie about his attempt to find the source of the Nile
He could also speak 29 languages and had numerous near death escapades! He almost gave himself away as a non-muslim when he forgot to squat to pee rather than go standing
Movie about Burton was called Mountains of the Moon. He was one of the most fascinating scholars/adventurers of all time.
Local Cretan resistance in WWII was so great that civilians would attack Axis paratroopers as they were landing with knives, axes, scythes and even their bare hands.
The Nazi paratroopers faced fierce resistance by the poorly armed civilians and had heavy losses. They never used as paratroopers again, until the end of the war. As reprisals they killed as many civilians they found and razed the village closest to their landing zone. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Razing_of_Kandanos
(from the wiki entry) The text reads: "Kandanos was destroyed in retaliation for the béstial ambush murder of a paratrooper platoon and a half-platoon of military engineers by armed men and women."
Load More Replies...Crete was attacked by German paratroopers. The few ANZAC forces defending Crete savaged them so badly they were never considered a proper force again. Unfortunately the NZ general Freyberg gambled on whether the Germans would land on the coast or the airfield and lost. None the less it was a humiliating lesson for the Axis forces
German paratroopers, unlike the Allies, did not jump with their weapons, instead, they retrieved them from canisters which were dropped with them. That made them more vulnerable to being attacked as soon as they landed.
Sugar isn’t directly bad for your teeth, but rather it creates the perfect environment for bacteria in your mouth to thrive, and they produce acid as a byproduct which IS bad for your teeth.
Just like a punch to the nose isn't directly bad for you, but rather it creates the perfect conditions for the capillaries in the nose to bust open, causing pain and bleeding as a byproduct which IS bad for your ego.
Just like falling out of a plane won’t kill you, but the landing will.
Load More Replies...Potato chips are actually much worse because bits remain between the teeth much longer than simple sugars, which dissolve quickly.
There's a bacterial strain that doesn't do that, and will take over your mouth from the harmful bacteria. Don't know about now, but there was a program years ago where people were able to get voluntary inoculation with it, basically just a quick spray. It worked extremely well. Ask your dentist, you never know, it might still be available.
Rodin, the famed sculptor, didn’t actually sculpt in marble. He made sand models and his assistants, namely Camille Claudel, made the art we love.
Just like James Patterson doesn't write his own books! he just gives the premise to one of his many ghost writers and they do the work, he gets all the credit and the money.
He used to write his own stuff, but like many aging prolific authors including Alastair Maclean eventually succumbed to pressure from publishers to keep churning books out and started to 'co-author'
Load More Replies...
There was case in US where a person failed to die during electric chair execution and then his lawyers tried to argue that he was not dead but he had been executed and that it was cruel to go through a second time.
I wonder. In Britain, at least according to old movies, the sentence would always be "...hanged by the neck until dead", so the possibility of avoiding a second execution attempt had already been recognised and avoided.
That started with a woman playing the same games as in this post - she was set free and they changed the wording after that
Load More Replies...Do they not have the language "until dead" in the sentences? I'm pretty much against death penalty except in the most extreme of instances, but I thought that was a pretty common wording to use to avoid "execution survival".
The only fair thing us never to do it at all.
Load More Replies...
Millvina Dean was the last and youngest survivor of the Titanic. She was just over 2 months old when the Titanic sank on April 14, 1912. Dean credits her father for her survival. She was one of 706 people — mostly women and children — who survived. Her father was among the 1,517 who died.
Near the end of her life, Ada Lovelace had a religious transformation and began to repent the conduct of her life. After confessing something to her husband 3 months before her death, he abandoned her bedside. It is not known what she told him.
It's rumoured to be something truly unforgivable, like "I've invented JavaScript"
To add a bit of context, it wasn't a religious transformation that she just came too on her own. She was dying of cancer, and for the last period of her life was being taken care of by her mother, who was obsessed with morality and kept her isolated from her friends and family. A sad ending, and likely heavily influenced by her mother.
Religion at it again, baiting the vulnerable in. She was incredible, a true genius in regards other geniuses of her time didn't even know yet.
Load More Replies..."I've prayed that someone contacts you regarding your car's extended warranty..."
Ivan VI of Russia, who ascended the throne at the age of two months, was overthrown by his cousin Elizabeth Petrovna a year into his reign. He spent the next 20 of his life secretly imprisoned without the guards knowing his true identity, before being killed in an attempted rescue.
I believe being any kind of person in power anywhere is
Load More Replies...How hard would it be to overthrow a 14 month old? Weird flex, but ok
In China, water is typically drunk hot.
I once knew a Vietnamese who always drank his freshly brewed coffee in simply one go......RIP my dear Thò Bui Quang...☕ 🇻🇳 ♨️
My best friends father, who had a serious heart condition, called it crystal tea...he wasn't allowed, among other things, coffee or tea, as it would cause him to have a heart attack
Catherine O’Hara (Moira from Shitt’s Creek) has reversed internal organs, a condition known as situs inversus.
You have to be very young to think of Schitt's Creek when you think of Catherine O'Hara.
Not sure what it says that I immediately think of SCTV....
Load More Replies...She has this condition because she didn't know how "fold the çheese".
She was plucked into the 4th dimension, turned over, and put back into the 3rd.
Levi Hutchins created America's first mechanical alarm clock in 1787 because he wanted to get up at 4am every day. So his device was only set to that desired time and it was another 60 years before Antoine Redier made one that was able to be adjusted to a time other than 4am.
Julius Schmid arrived in NYC as a penniless, partially paralyzed German immigrant. He got a job at a sausage maker where he started selling the leftover animal intestines as condoms. He grew this into a multi-million dollar business eventually being named "the undisputed king of condoms".
"I'll take a case of extra large animal intestines for the weekend please"
During a 6-mo period, 2,055 Brown Recluse spiders were collected in a 19th-century-built home in Lenexa, KS. Estimates show that at least 400 spiders were large enough to cause envenomation. A family of 4 had been living there since 1996 and had never been bit despite seeing them multiple times.
I mean, typically the average human (even the tiny ones) are not on the prey list of spiders, so yes, the numbers are impressive, but I'm not super surprised the family members were not bitten. Spiders are anyway quite good at minding their own business. If I'd like to live there personally is another question...
If my family decided to bring 2055 spiders into our home, I'd move out.
They're called brown recluse because they're brown... and reclusive... they don't actively seek you out like ticks would. Most envenomizations would be accidental, and unless you're up in the attic (or basement) every day, the chances will be small. Black widow spiders are the same way--you only see them if you look in their hiding places. Still, I wouldn't want to have that many in my home.
Did they gather the spiders and collect them in the home? Or were they collected from the home? I like to imagine someone gathering 2,055 spiders and unleashing them on the family.
The world's first hard drive, the IBM 350, was introduced in 1956. It was leased to companies for $37,600/month (adjusted to 2024), weighed one ton, and held 3.75 MB, about the size of a small PDF file.
Even in the early1980s when I worked in computer operations the standard disk storage devices used in big IBM mainframe systems was a device called the 3350 which weighed about 20kg for the disk array itself (we used to have to change them by hand occasionally) plus the actual machine which was much heavier, and had a capacity of just over 300Mb.
Many of the old school still working IT professionals began when "disk cartridges", basically a huge portable disk, sized nearly twice a vinyl lp, were in use, for sizes of 5 or 10 megabytes. The system Ive been using this at school had 64 kilobytes of ram, and we perfectly used it with six terminals, no lags. Just text programming, and just a bit short after cards were in use, no more than 4 years before.
Load More Replies...In Japan, you can hire a person to apologize on your behalf.
The average cost of obtaining a Driver's License in Germany is 3,000€ or $3,300. The total includes fees for: authorities and exams, learning materials, driving lessons and tuition.
Pfft...Michigan citizens pay that much for auto insurance, especially with a teenager on it.
I live in West Michigan $700 per year. Of course I drive a hoopity and my driving record is spotless. It was significantly higher when I lived in the metro Detroit area.
Load More Replies...I probably spent close to that in Australia. I had no one to give me lessons, so I paid for them all.
I had at about € 1800 in 2003, plus an additional € 400 for the trailor exam. But that was on the countryside, where you drive the instructor to the village pub and the exam is driving the examinant to the gare before he misses his train 😅
Glenn Hughes, an American singer who was the original "Leatherman" character in the disco group Village People, was interred wearing his leatherman outfit at Saint Charles Cemetery in Farmingdale, New York.
Glenn was straight, married with children, but took his role as the Leatherman seriously and was extremely proud of what he did for the gay community.
During the rescue of Maersk Alabama Captain Phillips from Somali pirates the $30,000 in cash they obtained from the ship went missing, 2 Seal team six members were investigated but never charged. The money was never recovered.
Up until the 1980s, all major UK banks had to have their head offices within a 10 minute walk of the Bank of England. This was so that in the event of a financial crisis, the heads of each bank could easily be assembled.
Not sure I believe this one is true. Maybe English banks, however the big banks in Scotland for example had their head offices in Glasgow and Edinburgh. Most had a presence in London as well as it's the financial capital, but the head offices were not there.
"Until then the Bank of England had insisted that all of London's banks had to be within 10 minutes' walking distance of the governor's office so, it was said, in a crisis he could summon the lords of finance to his parlour with half an hour's notice." https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-37751599
Load More Replies..."the heads of each bank could easily be assembled" what about the bodies?
A group of American sugar plantation owners with support of the US Government overthrew the last Queen of Hawaii, Queen Liliuokalani to make Hawaii a US Protectorate. Hawaii would later be annexed.
Basically, that is how a lot of the US came to be. Stealing land from peoples that already lived there.
That's how history works, there are very few countries that can claim they didn't displace and or eradicate the native population and claim the land as their own. I'm not saying its right, but this is not unique at all.
Load More Replies...Although Sweden has the lowest level of people who smoke in Europe (9.3%), it's the only country where noticeably more women smoke than men.
A Romanian Orthodox priest and four nuns were jailed after they accidentally killed another nun in 2005 during an exorcism. They mistook her schizophrenia symptoms for demonic possession.
It's not 'mistook' if you refuse to believe the evidence that it was mental illness and insist on BS supernatural causes.
Exactly. You need to believe in demonic possession in order to mistake something for it. So, which ones were the mentally ill? The victim or the murderers? Or all of them?
Load More Replies...The phosphorus used in fertilizer for food production is considered a non-renewable and finite resource we will run out of someday.
as oil, gas, coal and a lot of other things that require digging or boring. This is the no 1 reason why solar, water and wind energy are interesting, because they are endlessly available, are owned by nobody and deliver themselves for free at the power plants. That they do not emit tinking and poisonous gasses is an added plus.
Unfortunately the _storage_ and indeed the distribution of all that green and ever-renewable energy is not so simple, lots and lots of environmentally-harmful practices involved.
Load More Replies...While noodles were popularized by Thailand’s government in the 1940s as part of an effort to save rice after a major flood, the first mention of Pad Thai in a cookbook only occurred in the 1960s.
The reason your mouth may feel gross after eating spinach is due to a chemical reaction called “spinach teeth”.
Yes, it feels to me like my teeth are coated in a powdery sand and tastes metallic. https://www.eatingwell.com/article/7872217/how-to-cook-spinach-weird-feeling-on-teeth/
I refuse to eat raw spinach because of the way it makes my mouth feel. I could eat cooked spinach in unlimited amounts, love the stuff.
I have that only with fresh spinach and I need to cook them first in water a couple of minutes before putting them in a dish. If I don't do that it's as annoying and 'painful' as nails screetching on a black board.
another reason to not eat spinach - aftertaste to the gross taste. Got it
The air force has a program in place that will keep B-52 bombers flying for over a hundred years since they were manufactured.
Why should they decommission working planes if they can be upgraded? Way cheaper than developing a new platform
And safer. You never read about the doors popping out of those babies.
Load More Replies...Spongebob Squarepants is credited for creating wider awareness of Leif Erikson Day outside the Norwegian-American community.
In 2000, a convicted murderer on death row's execution was denied because he was "too fat to hang".
And don't murder people. That helps too XD
Load More Replies...And then the government decided it had larger fish to fry...so, electric chair?
Uh, no. He weighed over 425 lbs (the scale only went that high) and a judge was concerned that Rupe would actually be decapitated if they attempted to hang him. He was so obese that, if they did execute him via hanging, the weight of his body may have literally torn his head from his neck. The judge deemed that this would be "cruel and unusual punishment."
Load More Replies...Mitchell Rupe. Sentenced to death three times for shooting two bank tellers. Eventually died of liver disease.
While leather is edible, largely containing 60–70% water and 30–35% protein, only leathers that are either untanned or vegetable-tanned can be eaten. Leathers tanned by chemicals like in shoes, wallets, and luggage will not be edible.
And still, people in extreme situations like famines, wars, sieges, lost explorers or early settlers have survived by eating leather...
The "chemical" they used to tan leather back then was very organic though...
Load More Replies...I heard the founder of Loving County, Texas aka Oliver Loving chewed on a leather glove for survival after being attacked and left for dead by Natives near the Pecos River. He was on a cattle drive at the time and managed to reach Fort Sumner in New Mexico before dying of gangrene septic shock.
In 2000, three Scottish sisters took out a 1 million pound insurance policy in the event one of them immaculately conceived the second coming of Christ. They paid £100 a year until 2006 when the insurance company canceled the policy.
Interesting. So the insurance company suddenly thinks the risk of immaculate conception is too high to insure.
Just what did the insurance company know that we didn't know?
Gee, I thought an insurance company would want as much as possible paid in for a policy. Why did they cancel the policy?
Did the company check that they stayed, erm, immaculate? Does the OP know that for Immaculate Conception the Catholic Church refers to Mary's conception and not to Jesus'? Around 1850 they decided that the mother of Christ could not have been burdened with the mark of the original sin, and this was declared a dogma. That is, something catholics are required to believe "because we said so". No trace of this in the Bible btw
The G.I. Piano (a.k.a. Victory Vertical) was a piano made by Steinway for the US military. Meant to be used in all kinds of theaters, it was designed to be small enough to be carried on a ship or parachuted from a plane and to be able to cope with the humidity of the South Pacific.
Bess Myerson who was the first Miss America, to be Jewish, in 1945. Reactions to her win were mixed, while Jews hailed her a hero and compared her to Queen Esther, 3 out of the 5 sponsors of Miss America refused to have her represent them. She later became a politician.
To prevent hardware disease, farmers feed cows magnets to bind any metal they eat in the fields.
What will really bake your noodle is that for research, some cows actually have a hole in them where you can reach in and investigate what the cow has been eating.... Seriously....
Load More Replies...You need to understand how a cow eats. They don't really chew the food first time around. Just grab, rearrange a little, and swallow. That's how so many of them end up with bad things in stomach 1 of 4. At least we're using baling twine now and not wire.
Yes. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_disease Only one magnet is fed to each cow.
Load More Replies...A neutrino could pass through a lightyear of lead before it has a 50% chance of hitting a lead atom.
"Nintendos pass through everything!" - Col. Jack O'Neill (Stargate SG-1)
If you like neutrinos, come to Lead, SD, we have a lab that is studying these in an old gold mine.
The torpedoed rms lusitania sank in broad daylight within sight of the coast in just 18 minutes, killing 1197 people.
The surviving 767 people were rescued in some amazing acts of heroism of both other survivors and Irish rescuers. A Royal Navy ship was sortied to the site against RN policy, but was turned back because they were given erroneous reports saying that there was no urgent necessity.
In 2012, a group of British students edited the Wikpedia article about electric toasters and inserted the false claim that a man named Alan MacMasters invented the toaster in 1893. The fake article was cited by newspapers and other organizations until the hoax was exposed in July 2022.
And yet people CONSTANTLY reference Wikipedia as a source of actual fact based information
The trick is not to use wiki itself as your source of info, but as a jumping off point to finding information... rather than just taking their word for it, scroll down to the bottom and look at THEIR sources..... not only do you have access to more info that way, but you can copy and paste the biblio entries to your own "works cited" page! ;-D
Load More Replies...
There’s a secret material called FOGBANK that is used in nuclear warheads. "The material is classified. Its composition is classified. Its use in the weapon is classified, and the process itself is classified.”
The also forgot the recipe to it, so they are trying to figure it out. IIRC, there was a Veritasium video about this.
A U.S. Air Force officer, John Stapp, survived a deceleration of 46.2 Gs during a rocket sled experiment in 1954, experiencing a rapid stop from 632 mph to 0 in just 1.4 seconds.
Apparently he broke his ribs, lost his dental fillings and was temporarily blind when both his retinas detached. He was also awarded an Ig Nobel prize after his death...
The 14-year-old actress in Kubrick's Lolita was apparently having a real-life "Lolita" experience with a 32-year-old producer during filming.
Disgusting, and the next person who calls "Lolita" a "tragic love story" rather than a story about a predator and his victim will be summarily taken out and shot.
It's kind of stunning (in a bad way) that ANYONE can think that "Lolita" (either the book or the movie) is a "love story" of ANY kind.
Load More Replies...When she was 16 Famous Spanish actress Maribel Verdú was living with a director Antonio González Rico how was 50 year old. Pretty discustinfnbut she got loads of parts in his movies.
Judy Garland, at 17, dated Spencer Tracy, who was married. He was 39.
In a reverse situation, in Italy we had a famous actress who was about 80 yo when married a young man around 30 yo. She was a very witty woman an jokingly said she had done so because she didn't want to become a widow. The man died at 35 in a car accident, she was with him and seriously injured but survived. Died at 95. Her name was Paola Borboni, the first italian actress to show bare breasts in a theatre (circa 1925)
Thinking about Judith Godrèche right now, more or less the same story. She recently sued Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon (producers) for rape, she had an abusive Lolita-like relationship with Jacquot from what I remember. It took decades for her to speak, and she talked to French senate to urge them to do something to protect children in movie productions. Great woman.
I'm not sure there's a link to actual proof. All I can find are allegations and conjectures, but I personally believe it probably DID happen. "Though Lyon credited the early stardom for her own “destruction,” it’s long been rumored that what occurred during filming—and what broke her—was a sexual relationship with the film’s producer, James B. Harris." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Lyon#Playing_Lolita
Load More Replies...Of Buttergate - a 2021 controversy caused by Canadian dairy farmers adding palm oil to cows' diets, resulting in butter that didn't spread at room temperature.
They hire the Japanese companies mentioned in the other entry. It's a circular, symbiotic apologetic torus. XD The Japanese hire Canadian expats when they need to make apologies, and the Canadians hire the Japanese apology-companies when THEY need to make apologies.... XD
Load More Replies...Gordon Ramsay robbed the restaurant that he was working in and framed his mentor Marco Pierre White so that they wouldn’t hire him to replace Ramsay.
Sounds like these celebrity chefs are not the nicest people. Gino D'ACampo is a convicted thief. He stole guitars from Paul Young and served time in prison for it. Oh, yes and Jamie Oliver is a Tw@t.
Cheeky. Very cheeky thing to do. Somehow knowing this information only makes me like him more. :)
Doubtful since his old British series show quite clearly that he's nothing loke the character he portrays for American reality TV.
Load More Replies...Aphantasia is a condition affecting 1 to 3% of people. Its mind or imagination blindness. People with Aphantasia cannot visualize anything in the minds.
Yep. And again I don't believe those percentages. Panda really seems obsessed with this for some reason.
Load More Replies..."...Baby One More Time" by Britney Spears was heard by Simon Cowell who knew it would be a hit. He offered the writer, Max Martin an Aston Martin if he would give the song to his boy band, Five. Five initially began writing verses; however, Martin had promised the song to Britney.
Oh man I thought I was the only one who remembers Five! If you got the feelin', less of the dreamin', are we getting down tonight? It's just round the corner, tell me if you wanna, Five will make you feel alright!
The Panopticon prison design used centrally positioned guards to create the illusion of constant surveillance, ensuring low-cost control over inmates behavior.
Modern broiler chickens have been bred to get so heavy so quickly it can lead to bone deformities.
Not helped by the inhumane conditions in which many of them are raised such that they can't get any exercise at all. Free Range eggs and chickens only, please. I've only ever used 'Label Rouge' ones for many years now, which is a French food certification guaranteeing standards of welfare and good farming practices.
Unfortunately modern rapid-growth broiler chicken breeds would not benefit from being free-range. The breed is completely effed up due to it being selectively bred to have unbelievably rapid growth (I believe some broiler breeds are ready for harvest by 4-8 weeks old) and they generally have larger/heavier breast-meat areas than other breeds, which contributes to injury and inactivity. One study showed that up to 80% of rapid-growth broiler chickens had leg/gait abnormalities, which led to them being extremely sedentary even when given access to outdoors/larger facilities to roam around in. I completely agree that battery cages are abhorrent, but for rapid-growth broiler breeds in specificity, being "free range" would not help. The breed is genetically doomed to pain and suffering for the few short weeks of their lives before they are harvested.
Load More Replies...Imagine ... if you were asked not, or not only, to pay for the corpse by exchanging money, but by living their life - would you, would anybody, agree to five weeks of hell for one meal? Plus - would offering this trade, and no alternative, be unfair by any means? If so, how come?
No film has ever won all four acting awards at the Oscars (Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, & Best Supporting Actress) and only three films have ever won three out of the four: A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), Network (1976), and Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022).
...The rock with the googly eyes let down the side on the last one....
South Asians are genetically predisposed to higher rates of central body obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
And yet people are still adamant it's not genetic and we can just... stop being fat whenever we like.
Frank Abagnale, the real-life inspiration for Catch Me If You Can, fabricated most of his infamous conman exploits, and much of his story was a hoax.
A group of Jews came to China around 10th century and lived in the heart area of China, Henan province where Yellow River flows and Chinese originated, till middle 19th century when finally broken by wars, all while maintaining their Jewish identity and traditions and even Hebrew language.
The last Communist leader of East Germany, Egon Krenz, is still alive. He spent 4 years in prison for crimes committed as a high-ranking politician in East Germany. He also still defends the former East Germany, is a Russophile, and believes that the Cold War never ended.
And Ukraine is still Russia. And the Mercedes is paid for. And the check is in the mail.
Load More Replies...Yeah, they kinda missed the opportunity for a Nuremberg Trial revival in the 90's - We still have politicians around that had high ranks in the SED
... and he never was a communist, he was an opportunist, rendering him obligated to identify as socialist, regardless of how well his ideas and decisions actually reflect actual socialism. Hate to brake it to some, but on a large scale, like a nation, socialism has never been tried out, nor honestly tried. The country was called "Deutsche Demokratische Republik", german democratic republic, and it was just as democratic as it was socialist. Naming ever other urinal after Karl Marx does not replace reading his writings, and reading them, obviously, doesn't lead to understanding them. But, well, he was right about the last one, as the true core value of the soviet union and its sattelites - a clique of power-bearing, self-serving turds that call themselves and act in the name of the people in every, and more important any, way they see fit. Oh, and ... and ... there was something about communistery somewhere in a dust-covered corner of their conscience, .. seems like liking the colour red was sufficient to call yourself a communist, if you were obedient. Socialism aims at something that, likely, didn't even have an official designation in soviet-derived societies.
Strawberry Pop-Tarts are one of the most purchased food items at Walmart during hurricane preparation.
I prefer the cinnamon sugar frosted ones, they are less sweet :)
Not toilet paper, or medicine, or batteries, or water, or first-aid kits? Okay, cool.
Over 60 percent of tooth decay involves genetic factors.
Just turned 54 and still haven't had a cavity! But my gums are terrible just like my mom's were
Supposedly gets worse if you're female and have had children, your chemistry changes or something.
Happy then, to report I still have most of my own. Folks had full dentures in their 40's or 50's.
Mickey Mantle, Hall of Fame CF, tore his ACL in his rookie year during the 1951 World Series. He went on to play the rest of his 18-year career on a torn ACL.
I skied unknowingly with a severed ACL for 13 years before it was spotted (and remedied) when I had another problem in the same knee. Being physically strong with good joint stability means that for some people it's not a problem. In my case it may have contributed to ongoing damage, but even that's not certain.
I was walking down the stairs in my apartment because maintenance was bringing a new stove. They tracked in a bit of snow. I stepped in it, fell, tore my acl, my pcl, my lcl, and the meniscus. When they took an xray, they're was a piece of bone torn away from my fibula. One knee dr said he'd only seen injuries like mine in car accidents and that I would need extensive surgery that he couldn't do. He sent me to a different knee specialist that said all I needed was some physical therapy. Now I have nerve damage on the outside of my leg and in my foot and my knee likes to turn sideways at random times.
In 2018 three illegally installed vending machines (that required an 8-inch hole to be dug & filled with concrete) were discovered in Long Island to be selling "crack pipes" disguised as pens for $2 each. The machines were originally tampon dispensers that had been ripped out of bathrooms.
"The machines were originally reported to authorities as pen dispensers, Councilman Michael Loguercio told reporters. 'Many people had thought within the community, because it was the first week of school, that perhaps they were actually selling pens.' " ::facepalms::
In Japan you can visit Soineya, a co-sleeping specialty shop. It’s a cafe where you pay for sleeping (literally) or cuddling with a girl you like.
People lack human touch and companionship so much sometimes. They aren't looking for something sexual but just for human contact - to be hugged or held for a short amount of time. I was reading that loneliness is considered almost an epidemic in Japan these days. This practice could literally save lives!
Well.... as long as the girl in question is okay with it......
Bismuth, the active ingredient in Pepto-Bismol, technically has no stable isotopes - however its most stable and common isotope has a half-life more than a billion times the age of the universe. (Some more facts in the comments).
Elephants cannot jump. There, now there's a fact in the comments!
Load More Replies...And oxidized bismuth is one of the most gorgeous minerals in existence XD It's literally rainbow!
Strongheart, a male German shepherd who was one of the earliest canine movie stars. Originally trained as a police dog, Strongheart served in the German Red Cross during World War I. Tragically he was burnt in an accident with a hot studio light, dying at age 11 on June 24, 1929.
Strongheart was called "Etzel von Oeringen" when he was whelped, and was brought to the United States at age three because his owner became stricken by poverty and could not support his dog. His owner wanted Strongheart to have a good life with a humane, loving owner, so he ensured that Strongheart entered the Shepherd Dog Club of America show in 1920. Strongheart was accidentally burned by a studio light at the age of 11, but it did not directly cause his death - a tumor formed at the injury site, which led to his death. The German Shepherd breed's lifespan is generally 10-12 years, so Strongheart led a good, long life. (My own GSD, Ember, died at age 12 due to mammary tumors.)
That's so sad! Mine was nine, he had bad breeding.
Load More Replies...I strongly doubt Red Cross let 3 or 4 month old puppies serve in WW1. I call B******t.
The cancelation of the US-Mexico Bracero Program indirectly lead to tasteless supermarket tomatoes.
The Bracero (literally "manual laborer") Program allowed Mexican citizens to come to the US to work on farms/in agriculture (so basically migrant farm workers.) When it was cancelled, farmers had to resort to mechanical/machine farming/harvesting. Only more robust produce can survive mechanical/machine harvesting, so the tomato cultivars that farmers grew shifted from flavorful "heirloom" type tomatoes to more physically robust varietals that were far less flavorful, but could survive being harvested by machine.
Load More Replies...While practicing for the '92 Olympics, the Dream Team lost (62-54) to an assembled squad of the best NCAA players. Head Coach Chuck Daly had limited Jordan's playing time & also made other non-optimal substitions in order to "throw the game" to teach the NBA players that they were not unbeatable.
About Jamake Highwater, a consultant on Star Trek: Voyager who made a career out of lying about being Native American.
Iirc these persons are called pretendians. The Native lady who collected the Oscar on the behalf of Marlon Brando (who refused to go because of how Native Americans were treated) was later exposed as a pretendian by her own sisters soon after her death. Her real name was Marie Louise Cruz, but she used that of Sacheen Littlefeather.
In 2007, Hamburg Mannheimer International (HMI), now part of Munich Re, held a party in Budapest with 20 prostitutes to reward 100 of its best salesmen.
Jesús, that's disgusting, at least one girl per salesman would be the minimum. /I I know people that organised company events and this still happened. The recently organised a training course for a dales team. Basically rented a hotel full of girls and coke. And some blue pills.
In my area there was a big local scandal when a new high-rise block of flats was officially opened and whoever was in charge rewarded - I think it was the construction crew? But it might have been the executives, I'm really not sure - with a party upstairs in the building, with strippers. Strippers who could be clearly seen through the uncovered windows by anyone who happened to be walking by. This building also happened to be right near a childcare centre AND a school. As in directly across the road. Heads rolled.
And then they let the kids play violent video games all day.
Load More Replies...Rikers Island, New York City’s largest jail, is located only 422 feet away from the runway of La Guardia Airport.
DVD started out as two competing standards by Sony/Phillips and Toshiba/Time Warner. The two ended up unifying into a single project after IBM, Microsoft, Apple, Compaq and Hewlett Packard said they would boycott booth unless they did so.
After the trailer of Grand Theft Auto VI was released, its featured song, Tom Petty's "Love Is a Long Road", saw a near-37,000% increase in Spotify streams, had almost 250,000 searches on Shazam, and ranked second on the worldwide iTunes chart.
Only tangentially related, but "Free Fallin' " is my lifelong favorite song. Tom Petty was a great musician - if you've never listened to any of his songs, I recommend giving them a listen sometime :)
That is a good song, but my favorite will probably always be "The Ballad of Curtis Loew" by Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Load More Replies...A Far Cry film, based on the video game, was released in 2006. Directed by Uwe Boll, it was a major box-office bomb, making only $743,000 against a $30 million budget.
Not his only video game movie to bomb. He also made films based on Bloodrayne, House of the Dead, Postal, and Dungeon Siege. Postal (which somehow managed to get both JK Simmons and Verne Troyer in the cast) had a reported budget of $15 million, and made less than $150,000.
In Bloodrayne they used sword, that were just cut out from cardboxes and wraped in alufoil. Was the first Uwe Boll movie imwatched with friends. We were laughing way to hard at this
Load More Replies...Toilet Boll strikes again. Thank god he never got his hands on Half Life, because he wanted to.
Correction, it made only $783,501 against a $30 Million estimated budget https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0400426/
The Tiger Keelback snake, one of the very few poisonous-venomous snakes in the World.
It is naturally venomous, but its poisonousness comes from ingesting poisonous toads and sequestering the toxins from the toads into glands into the snake's own body (kleptotoxisism.) So, it technically doesn't produce its own poisonous toxins, but it does produce its own venom.
A man sued his own search warrant and won the case in the Supreme Court. Titled Marcus v. Search Warrant, he believed the warrant was too vague and was unable to sue any of the agents as they acted within the law.
Unicode uses elephants as a baseline comparison for cultural frequency when considering whether to add a new emoji.
Someone on Reddit explained it pretty well: "Unicode is like a big committee that decides which new emojis get added to our phones. To keep things fair, they want to make sure that any new emoji represents something that’s important or common across many cultures. So, they use elephants as a baseline because elephants are recognized and important in multiple cultures (like in India, Africa, etc.). If something is as culturally significant and widespread as elephants, it’s more likely to be considered for a new emoji. Basically, if your emoji idea is as well-known or important globally as elephants, then it stands a good chance of getting approved!" So I guess the point is that, for an emoji to be added to the Great List of Emojis We All Use, it has to be a symbol/icon of something widespread and well-known across a large part of the world. So, I imagine a relatively new car company (e.g., Rivian) wouldn't be allowed to have their own emoji of their logo made, but a generic car emoji is allowed, as cars are recognizable, culturally significant, and widespread.
Load More Replies...Seth McFarlane is one of many waiting to be cryopreserved when they die.
If people want to get cryopreserved, it's all good, it's no skin off my back. I can also understand if the person has a disease or condition that is currently untreatable and fatal but MAY be treatable at some point in the future. But I do wonder about the hubris of a normal, healthy person who wants to be cryopreserved. XD
It seems like he's not planning to do that right now, but rather when death is due anyway.
Load More Replies...I hate the "get premium to continue reading" bs. Come on BP. First restricting dark mode, now cutting off articles??
I hate the "get premium to continue reading" bs. Come on BP. First restricting dark mode, now cutting off articles??
