Random Fact(oid)s, 2009

Requested by Silver Lining, who probably can’t remember the previous thread of this type.
 

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Henceforth (starting on July 11), anyone posting a piece of information here must say where the information came from. Reason: Including the source will help other MBers decide how accurate a factoid is and whether it is worth repeating.
 
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301 Responses to Random Fact(oid)s, 2009

  1. Randomosity 101 says:

    Ooh! I love random factoids! Bo is my favorite Muse!

    Pitcher plants digest bugs in pools of digestive juices in their “pitchers”, but some flies actually fly in and eat these bug smoothies.

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  2. Thanks For All The Fish42 says:

    (Eh-heh :oops: I found this on a web-page devoted to coconuts. Yes, the page was called “Random Coconut Facts…” I find that very funny.))
    -Pacific Islanders used to believe that the world was a giant coconut

    -Edison used coconut fibers as one of his attempts of making a filament. (Obviously) It didn’t work.

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    • KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

      Yes, that is very funny.

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    • Ducky says:

      How do you know the world isn’t a giant coconut?

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      • Thanks For All The Fish42 says:

        *finally finds out how he knows*
        Because if the world was a giant coconut, than we would dig for milk, not oil! Unless… The oil is equal to milk! Then, we would have some sort of genetically enhanced, super coconut! Or perhaps, the coconut is a metaphor for the world. Who knew that coconuts were so deep?!
        *doubts himself*

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  3. Cat's Eye says:

    -There’s a place in Missouri where you can rent a turtle.
    -You can burn 150 calories an hour by banging your head against the wall.

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  4. Kiga says:

    In Juneau, Alaska, owners of flamingos are not allowed to let their pets into barber shops. No joke.

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  5. vanillabean3.141 (Minka) says:

    I think it’s illegal in some U.S. state to cross its border with a duck on your head.

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  6. I-Man says:

    -Bank of America was originally called Bank of Italy until someone realized it was the United States. (from the May/June 2007 issue of Muse (or it might have been 2008))

    -In West Virginia, you CAN take roadkill home for dinner.

    -In some town in Georgia (I don’t remember the name), every citizen must own a rake.

    -In Greece, video games are outlawed.

    -Chewing bubble gum and blowing bubbles is one way to keep yourself from crying while cutting up an onion.

    -A lump of gold the size of your thumb nail can be hammered into a sheet the size of a tennis field (or is it a football field)?

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  7. Kokonilly says:

    In Minnesota (where I live):

    Mosquitoes are a public nuisance.
    (Well, it’s true.)
    It is illegal to stand around any building without a good reason to be there.
    (Oh noes! :shock: I’m a fugitive!)
    A person may not cross state lines with a duck atop his head.
    (Ah.)
    It is illegal to sleep naked.
    (…Seriously?)
    All men driving motorcycles must wear shirts.
    (I don’t believe it.)
    Citizens may not enter Wisconsin with a chicken on their head.
    (Hehe.)
    All bathtubs must have feet.
    (Yeah, right…)
    Residents of even numbered addresses may not water their plants on odd-numbered days excluding the thirty first day where it applies. (Cottage Grove)
    It shall be the duty of any policeman or any other officer to enforce the provisions of this Section, and if any cat is found running at large, or which is found in any street, alley or public place, it shall be the duty of any policeman or other officer of the city to kill such cat.
    (Hibbing)
    Red cars may not drive down Lake Street.
    (This is in Minneapolis.)
    Driving a truck with dirty tires is considered a public nuisance. (Minnetonka)
    Placing tacks on a sidewalk is considered a public nuisance. (Minnetonka)
    Any person who persuades another to enter a massage therapist business after 11:00 PM is guilty of a misdemeanor.
    (Minnetonka)
    Hamburgers may not be eaten on Sundays.
    (St. Cloud)
    You’re not allowed to park your elephant on Main Street.
    (Virginia)

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  8. Randomosity 101 says:

    6- Do you go to, or have you been to M**** Middle School? Because every fact except the first on was in the school planner this past year. (Past as in it is now summer vacation.)

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  9. Silver Lining says:

    (Thank you, GAPAs! *choklit*)

    In MA…
    At a wake, mourners may eat no more than three sandwiches.

    Snoring is prohibited unless all bedroom windows are closed and securely locked.

    It is against the law to put tomatoes in clam chowder.
    —————————

    Tourists visiting Iceland should know that tipping at a restaurant is considered an insult.

    It was once against the law to have a pet dog in a city in Iceland.

    The names of Popeye’s four nephews are Pipeye, Peepeye, Pupeye, and Poopeye.

    Every time you lick a stamp, you’re consuming 1/10 of a calorie.

    In Las Vegas, it’s illegal to pawn your dentures.

    The average person has over 1,460 dreams a year.

    Recycling one glass jar, saves enough energy to watch T.V for 3 hours.

    In the White House, there are 13,092 knives, forks and spoons.

    Slugs have 4 noses.

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  10. Some of these “facts” sound fishy to me.

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  11. KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

    Light from the sun takes eight minutes to reach your eyes.

    Sir Ernest Shackleton and Galileo Galilee had the same birthday, February 15.

    One of the stewardesses who survived the sinking of the Titanic later became a nurse for the British military and was serving on the Titanic’s sister ship, the Britannic, when it hit a mine in World War I. Once again, she survived.

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  12. Kiga says:

    I think our legislators might’ve been a little drunk when they wrote these…

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  13. Randomosity 101 says:

    8.1- Oh, you’re right. Sorry.

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  14. Piggy says:

    9- I definitely would’ve voted for the law banning tomatoes in clam chowder. Clam chowder is supposed to be white and creamy. *insert large fight between the two clam chowder armies here*

    11- The sunlight one just made me think of a terrible pickup line: “Sunlight may take eight minutes to reach one’s eyes, but it didn’t reach my heart ’til I saw you.” As soon as I can go into a bar, that’ll be the first pickup line I use.

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  15. Errata says:

    Did you know that it’s illegal to flirt or respond to flirting with your eyes or hands in San Antonio? (Much Ado, forget which issue. Probably doesn’t matter, given that nobody knows about it.)

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  16. Kiga says:

    Well, okay, I googled ‘Weird laws’ and that’s what came up. Perhaps not that accurate. Decide for yourself.

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  17. KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

    Marbles don’t float in ketchup. -Where On Earth Is Carmen Sandiego.

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  18. Ducky says:

    ♦Until the nineteenth century, solid blocks of tea were used as money in Siberia.
    ♦Over 2500 left handed people a year are killed from using products made for right handed people.
    ♦Taphephobia is the fear of being buried alive.
    ♦Windmills always turn counter-clockwise. Except for the windmills in Ireland.
    ♦The electric chair was invented by a dentist.
    ♦In England, in the 1880’s, “Pants” was considered a dirty word!
    ♦Ernest Vincent Wright wrote a novel, “Gadsby”, which contains over 50,000 words — none of them with the letter E!

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  19. KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

    More people are killed by lightning strikes than sharks each year.

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  20. tgypwya says:

    On three seperate occasions- in 1664, 1785, and 1860- thee were shipwrecks where only one person survived the accident. Each time that one person’s name was Hugh Williams. -The Book of Useless Information

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    • Silver Lining says:

      Oooh, who wrote that book? I need it!

      Um, to make this an un-pointless (pointful? non-pointless?) I will know state an amazing fact that Jay Leno brought to attention: The equator is long enough to wrap around the earth once.

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  21. Randomosity 101 says:

    In Tennessee, in Memphis restaurants, it is illegal to give any pie to fellow diners. It is also illegal to take unfinished pie home. All pie must be eaten on the premises.

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  22. Alice says:

    20- But how many more times were there shipwrecks whose only survivor was not named Hugh Williams?

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  23. Thanks For All The Fish42 (AT THE LIBRARY) says:

    21- (From the same website) In Memphis, it is illegal for a woman to drive by herself; “a man must walk or run in front of the vehicle, waving a red flag in order to warn approaching pedestrians and motorists.”

    SOURCE: totallyuselessknowledge.com/laws

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  24. Regarding all these silly alleged laws, here is a comment from Snopes.com:

    “We could spend the rest of our lives trying to track down and verify all these wacky laws, an effort which in nearly all cases reveals only that the alleged laws never existed or fell off the books so long ago that no one can demonstrate they were ever real. ”

    As for the specific “law” mentioned in Comment 23 — which doesn’t even make sense with the speed of modern cars — the best anyone has come up with is the 1865 Locomotive Act (amended in 1878): it “restricted the speed of horse-less vehicles to 4mph in open country and 2 mph in towns. Act required three drivers for each vehicle – 2 to travel in the vehicle and one to walk ahead carrying a red flag.” The act was repealed in 1896.

    This act was in England, by the way. The description came from a public education site sponsored by the Devon and Cornwall Constabulary, among others. [dcsafetycameras.org/factFigures/redFlag.aspx]

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  25. KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

    In Superman’s first appearances in comics, he could not fly, but only “leap tall buildings in a single bound”. The flying was added in an animated series because it was easier to animate.

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  26. SudoRandom says:

    Massachusetts

    * It is illegal to wear a goatee without a license.
    * North Andover prohibits its citizens from carrying “space guns.”
    * State legislation forbids dueling with water pistols.
    * In Boston, it is illegal to take a bath unless one has been ordered by a physician to do so.
    * In 1659, the state outlawed Christmas.

    Maryland

    * In Baltimore, it is illegal to wash or scrub sinks, no matter how dirty they get.
    * Every person who has bowled since 1833 may be fined $2 for each offense.
    * In Halethorpe, it is illegal to kiss for more than one second.
    * It’s illegal to mistreat oysters. ((Does frying them in butter and then eating them count?))
    * It’s illegal to play Randy Newman’s “Short People” on the radio. (I’ve heard it. They’ve got good reason. It’s along the lines of, “Short people got no reason to live”.)
    Same place as Fishy.

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    • RoseQuartz says:

      It’s illegal to take a bath? Woah, I hope that law was repealed a while ago…

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    • Enceladus (The Returned) says:

      Oh, that rule was in the 1600’s when they thought bathing was deadly. They outlawed Christmas because they thought it too frivolous and joyful. Puritans, puritans, puritans. When will they ever learn?

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    • Keiffer says:

      Wait, so if I lived in North Andover, I couldn’t carry around my phaser that is conveniently located on the DVD shelf? GASP.

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  27. vanillabean3.141 (Minka) says:

    Fishing is the favorite activity of the actor who plays Draco Malfoy.
    -from my dad, who saw an interview

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  28. Kiga says:

    My dad heard on the radio that January 23 is the most depressing day of the year because people have settled back into their schedules after the holidays. What I want to know is why not January 22? Are we actually happier on January 22?

    My dad was born on January 23, and he is not depressed, btw. Neither is his birthday, at least not in our house.

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  29. iamisthbest says:

    More people ,each year are killed by vending machines then sharks.
    More people ,each year are killed by goats then plane crashes.

    I heard the shark one from a movie called Sharkwater.
    A pig excretes sweat through it’s nostrils.
    Elvis Presley got a “C” in 6th grade music class.
    Virginia extends further west then West Virginia (look on a map).

    These ones are from: http://www. amusingfacts. com

    One billion seconds is about 32 years.

    The average day is actually 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.09 seconds.

    We have a leap year every four years to make up for this shortfall.

    Every U.S. bill regardless of denomination costs just 4 cents to make.

    The most overdue book in the world was borrowed from Sidney Sussex College in Cambridge, England and was returned 288 years later. (imagine the late fee!)

    Natural gas does not have any odour. In order to detect a gas leak, some gas companies add a chemical that smells similar like rotten eggs.

    A galactic year is 250 million Earth-years. This is the time it takes for our solar system to make one revolution around the Milky Way Galaxy.

    The stapler was invented in Spring Valley, Minnesota.

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  30. Thanks For All The Fish42 says:

    Leap-Years: I’ve done some math, (by that I mean plug it in to the google calculator) and every four years there are 23.2505667 excess hours. We add a day to catch up. I know that it will take a long time, but don’t the .7494333 hours mess with time? Back when they didn’t use leap years, it took awhile, but it caught up. I know this would take MUCH longer, but still!
    *scans internet*
    AHA!!! I’ve got it. 1700, 1800, 1900 were not leap years. This is to account for the excess days created every 400 years.
    *clears throat*
    IN CONCLUSION, Every four years there is a leap year, EXCEPT when you come up to a number divisible by 100, but not 400.

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  31. KaiYves (Holding six wung points for Enceladus) says:

    In orbit on the space shuttle, a traveler will see 16 sunsets and 16 sunrises a day.

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  32. Randomosity 101 says:

    31.1- I agree. The funny thing is, I read that book myself for a school assignment. Of course, it was English, so it was called The Little Prince.

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    • Loreena Chatheng (AP) says:

      I also read it in English ( :D I almost typed Engkush), my French is not that good, but I just prefer to call it by it’s original name.

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  33. Insane MLDM+Ferelda(^&^) (131 coolpointz)(1 b-day point)(200 twisted evilpoints) says:

    There is such a thing as hpb surgery. (I googled hpb) Of course, it’s some weird acronym (which I have forgotten, unfortunately) that has nothing to with :idea: ‘s, but… *worries*

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  34. Hepato-pancreat[ic]o-biliary surgery is surgery on the liver and pancreas. That would be deep bunnification indeed.

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  35. Roglol says:

    -The words ‘do not fear’ or ‘do not be afraid’ can be found 365 times in the bible. That is one for ever day of the year (except on leap years)

    -The shortest verse in the Bible is ‘Jesus wept’ (Or he wept. I can’t remember)

    (I got those from some one who goes to my church and she really knows her stuff. )

    – In Ancient Egypt, if a family’s cat died, to mourn the family would shave off their eyebrows

    – Blackbeard’s (the pirate) real name was Edward Teach. He would braid rope into his long hair and beard and set it on fire before going into battle. Many people surrendered before the fight began. He also was only a pirate for two years.

    – Sir Frances Drake was the first Englishman to circumnavigated the globe. He also became a pirate and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth the first.

    (The stuff on Egypt and pirates came from books)

    -While he was running for office, the Whigs presented President Harrison as a humble, Ohio farmer who had been born in a log cabin. In fact, Harrison was a wealthy, educated man from Virginia whose family owned a large estate.

    -Just weeks after taking office, Harrison died of pneumonia

    -The Whigs Throw Tyler (Harrison vice-president turn president) out of their party because he did not do what they wanted Harrison to do.

    (That is what I call karma. I got that from my social studies book)

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  36. Enceladus (The Returned) says:

    Elephants are the only animal that cannot jump.

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  37. Kokonilly says:

    The first person to circumnavigate the globe was not Ferdinand Magellan, but Enrique of Malacca, a Filipino slave of Magellan who was taken from the Philippines. He later returned when Magellan was shot by arrows somewhere and became the first person to circumnavigate the globe. (I think I already said that.)

    From: The Cartoon History of the Universe by Larry Gonick. :P

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  38. Amblystoma Maculatum and Joolb (~)_+) says:

    Mosquitoes are more likely to bite people who have recently eaten a banana.
    That was from the book Children’s Miscellany.

    35- Actually, the shortest Bible verse is “He said”. I forget where I learned that.

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  39. SilverLeopard says:

    Chewing gum is illegal in Singapore.

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    • SilverLeopard says:

      Oh, and that came from a quiz on a website for a magazine called New Moon Girls. My friend goes on that website, and she told me that one.

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      • Errata says:

        Yep, and it’s also illegal to not flush the toilet. That would be an embarrassing ticket to get!

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        • Enceladus says:

          It’s also illegal to spit and it’s illegal to feed the pigeons. Because spitting causes tuberculosis, and feeding the pigeons is feeding unwanted animals. From a humor column in Scientific American.

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  40. LittleBasementKitten says:

    Did you know that a female lumberjack is called a lumberjill? It’s true. I get most of my facts and/or factoids from a book called Bathroom Reader for Kids Only. :)

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    • LittleBasementKitten says:

      SFTDP but werefor you knowing (Thats from a book called The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex. That line was said by a Boov. It’s an alien. I can’t describe it beyond that) that an ostriches eye is bigger than it’s brain? That the # thing is an octothorpe? I could ramble on all day about the factoids I know from books. :)

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  41. KaiYves *Back from Space Academy!* says:

    Somewhat related to post 28-

    NASA’s three worst losses of human life all occurred within the same week, January 26-February 2nd, although decades apart.

    (3 people asphyxiated on Apollo 1 on January 27, 1967, 7 people died on January 28, 1986 when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded, and 7 others burned up on re-entry in the Space Shuttle Columbia on February 1, 2003.) This is is sometimes known as Tragedy Week.

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    • Koppar says:

      So, if you’re going to be on a rocket, don’t go during January 26-February 2, and most certainly don’t go if one of the other passengers is named Hugh Williams. :wink:

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    • oxlin says:

      Now I’m listening to the song “Lost in the Blue” by the Minstrels of Mayhem which is a good song and all about the Columbia disaster.

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  42. KaiYves (Welcome Home, Endeavour!) says:

    An arctic tern spends the summer in the Arctic, when the sun is up all day long, then flies to the Antarctic in time for their summer, repeating the process as long as it lives. Consequently, the arctic tern spends more of its life in daylight than any other living creature.

    (Source- Eyewitness Video, “Arctic and Antarctic”)

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  43. LittleBasementKitten says:

    Hello again! Werefor you knowing that the original 7-Up (the soda) recipe contained horseradish? Thats a lot easier to say than some of the stuff they put in there. :)

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  44. SudoRandom says:

    A punk is a baby elephant.

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    • Silver Lining says:

      SFTDP, but I just found this on Amusingfacts .com, and it was so cool I had to share it: Ringo Starr once appeared in a Japanese advertisement for apple sauce. Ironically, his name means “apple sauce” in Japanese.

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  45. LittleBasementKitten says:

    The yo-yo was originally a weapon, with sharp edges. “Yo-yo” means come-come in, uh, I forget what language. :lol:

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  46. Enceladus says:

    I love this thread.

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  47. KaiYves (Welcome Home, Endeavour!) says:

    The astronomical body Pluto was named by an 11 year old girl who lived in England. An American probably wouldn’t have thought of the name because at the time, “Pluto” was more commonly associated with a laxative known as “Pluto Water” rather than the Roman god.

    I swear. It’s in Neil Tyson’s book The Pluto Files.

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  48. Piggy says:

    Kellog’s corn flakes were not the first American breakfast cereal. Popcorn was served for breakfast at the Kellogs’ Battle Creek Sanitarium decades before the process for making corn flakes were invented. Unofficially, the only reason the company sold corn flakes at its beginning was that Kellog didn’t know how he would get people to buy boxes of pre-popped popcorn.

    Source: Good Eats

    I’ve tried some, and it’s quite delicious. Just pour some milk over lightly salted corn, as you would over cereal, and sprinkle a bit of sugar on top.

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    • JJjetplane-girlw/catsâ„¢ says:

      I LOVE Good Eats!!!!

      Edamame are unripe soybeans.

      Source: I’m not sure. I’ve completely forgotten. But I’m pretty sure it’s correct. Maybe good eats… probably.

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  49. KaiYves (Go Discovery!) says:

    The Romans worshiped a god of the sewer and a goddess of the door hinge.

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  50. bubblebabe46 says:

    Drew Barrymore was only seven years old when she became the youngest-ever host of SNL.
    -Movie screen thingie before the previews come on

    hee hee hee

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  51. Enceladus says:

    August 8th is Sneak Zuchini on Your Neighbor’s Porch Night (Ace Of Cakes)

    Google search of Cake day:
    May 11th is Eat what you want day

    Google search of Egg day:
    May 22nd is Egg day

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  52. Silver Lining says:

    Did you know that…

    111,111,111 X 111,111,111 = 12, 345, 678, 987, 654, 321? –A random fact in my school-issued agenda

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  53. KaiYves says:

    The term “zero gravity” is misleading, while there is indeed gravity inside a spaceship in orbit, it is one-millionth of what it is on Earth.

    Close enough.

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  54. I-Man says:

    Today is the birthday of the invention of the bar code.

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  55. KaiYves- Got Water? says:

    The American political party currently known as the Democrats was originally called the Republicans.

    Confusing, isn’t it?

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    • Piggy says:

      Well, the Democratic-Republicans, not just the Republicans. Furthermore, the Democratic-Republican beliefs synced up more closely with modern Republican beliefs–there was a shift in ideology at the collapse of the Federalist party in the early 19th century (when they took a large hit at the election of Thomas Jefferson, a Democratic-Republican, and a final blow at America’s winning of the War of 1812 (see: Hartford Convention), and the D-Rs, which before had been somewhat synonymous with the Anti-Federalist party, absorbed a lot of the abandoned Federalist beliefs. The Era of Good Feelings it was called, and the only period in American history with a single political party.

      Sorry, I’m in a history sort of mood.

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  56. bubblebabe46 says:

    42 facts!!!
    1) Bill Clinton was our forty-second president.
    2) In The Hunger Games, Gale submitted his name forty-two times.
    3) I have 42 buddies on AIM.
    4) Specialist period at our school is 42 minutes.
    5) At the Boston Tea Party the Sons of Liberty threw 342 barrels of tea into the harbor ( not really 42, I know )
    6) There are 42 dwarf planets.
    7) It takes 42 Earth days for Uranus to rotate around its axis.
    8) “42” is a song by Coldplay.
    That’s all I have for now – who has more? I want to hear them please!

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    • Thanks For All The Fish42 says:

      Really? In The Hunger Games? How come I don’t remember that… The guide and the games are my favorite books!

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    • Pseudonym says:

      Just to nitpick, I think 6 is actually 42 at most, at least in our solar system.
      And, for a factoid:
      Fear of chopsticks: Consecotaleophobia

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  57. bubblebabe46 says:

    SFTDP: Piggy, I HAVE to know who on earth that is on your icon – I’m thinking it’s some character from the Harry Potter films…

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  58. bubblebabe46 says:

    Sophie told me it was the Albino or whatever from “The Princess Bride.” Okay. I remembered another 42 fact: There are 42 days in an eyelash’s lifespan. Yes, an eyelash. Weird eh?

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  59. KaiYves- Got Water says:

    The deepest spot in the ocean is the Marianas Trench in the Pacific. If Mount Everest were placed at the bottom of the Trench, its summit would still be a mile underwater.

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  60. Rainbow*Star says:

    The four living descendants of Adolf Hitler have made a pact not to have children, in order to end the Hitler line.
    Some people can breathe a little through their tear ducts.
    Clint Eastwood is allergic to horses.
    – Ripley’s Believe It Or Not, I think

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  61. bubblebabe225, who needs to start READING the threads first before posting on them says:

    This girl Pseudo knows once claimed she could breathe through her eyes, then covered her mouth with her hands and made breathing sounds while bugging her eyes out. I wonder if she was aware of that.
    Who has more 42 facts?

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  62. bookgirl-me says:

    60-Umm. I don’t think Hitler had any descendants; relatives have altered their names but I think there are more than six. I think I might have exhaled through my tear ducts once when I was trying to clear my ears with a cold but I never could breathe through them.

    According to a study by a Seattle-based company, austrians are the sixth-smartest people in the world, coming after Asian countries. I read it in the Heute, a newspaper, but I’ll see if I can find an english article online from a more reputable source before I start doing a victory dance.

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    • bella the aviatrix says:

      According to Wikipedia (though I don’t know if you’d call Wikipedia a reputable source – well, it was an article about a book that had conducted a study about this. But anyway,) Hong Kong people have the highest average IQ (107). Hong Kong isn’t really a country though (technically it’s an SAR) and the country with the highest IQ is South Korea, with an average IQ of 106. China is ranked 11th with an average of exactly 100.

      Austrians have an average IQ of 102, 5th ranked among countries but 6th ranked if you include Hong Kong.

      The US is ranked 17th with an average IQ of 98. No offense. I’m sure that statistic doesn’t include MBers – you’re all outliers and don’t count XD. I’d be offended my IQ was only 107. Which it is not.

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  63. bubblebabe225 says:

    42% of the population in the United States is a current or former smoker.

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  64. Pseudonym says:

    Cairo didn’t have a telephone book until 1978.
    Egypt has 42 districts.
    (Both from social studies class.)

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  65. bella the aviatrix says:

    A 1983 recording of Richard Strauss’ Eine Alpensinfonie with Herbert von Karajan conducting the Berlin Philharmonic became the first compact disc ever pressed.
    (From Wikipedia page on Eine Alpensinfonie)

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  66. I-Man says:

    It is theoretically impossible to prove that the moon exists.

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  67. KaiYves- Water? YES! (Dr. Korlin) says:

    The nation with the most robots per capita is South Korea.

    The nation with the highest number of homes connected to the Internet per capita is also South Korea.

    The nation with the highest number of cellphone users per capita is Lichtenstein.

    The nation that consumes the most ice cream is Australia.

    Gosh, I love geography.

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  68. bubblebabe225 says:

    The minimum wage in 1938 when you had worked for your employer for 2 years was 42 cents an hour.
    42 black Americans were lynched in 1933. ( Wonderfully random, amazingly obscure, horribly horrendous. )
    42 years passed between Frances Perkins ( First female appointed to a presidential cabinet position ) resigning and some other female cabineter appointed by Lyndon Johnson.
    ( Yes. I read a book about Frances Perkins recently. )
    Theodore Roosevelt was the United States’s youngest President at 42 years old.
    ( I FEEL SO COOL!! )

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  69. bubblebabe225 says:

    To pass an Army physical fitness test, an 18-year-old male must be able to do 42 push-ups in 2 minutes.
    42 toys were inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame this week.
    PLEASE, MY FRIENDS, PLEASE…FIND RANDOM 42 FACTS AND POST THEM ON HERE! PLEASE!

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  70. bubblebabe225 says:

    Numbers 35:6: Six of the towns you give the Levites will be cities of refuge, to which a person who has killed someone may flee. In addition, give them 42 other towns.

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  71. bubblebabe225 says:

    SFTQP, whoa. 42 facts rock.
    Isaac Newton was born on the same day as Galileo Galilei ( Galilee? ) died, in 1642.
    In “The Wave,” Clarktown’s high school football team beats Gordon High 42-6.

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  72. bubblebabe225 says:

    SFT…I don’t even know what it is, at this point. Am I the only one on here? PLEASE don’t zap me, GAPAs, I haven’t posted on here for 8 days!
    ————————————————————————————————-
    The maximum workweek in 1940 was 42 hours a week.

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  73. Keiffer says:

    My Grandpa played the bagpipes for poeple in the morgue, then he died, how coincidental.
    -My Grandma

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  74. KaiYves says:

    In the first comic the Hulk appeared in, he was colored gray, but the printer couldn’t keep the shading consistent, so the shade of gray that he appeared varied throughout the issue. Since green was less of a problem to print, the Hulk was colored green starting with the next issue.

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  75. Rosebud2 says:

    An onion, an apple and potato all have the same taste. The differences in flavor are caused by their smell.

    The can opener was invented 48 years after cans were introduced.

    A square piece of dry paper can’t be folded in half more than 7 times.

    Over the last 150 years the average height of people in industrialized nations increased by 4 inches.

    Eskimos use refrigerators to keep food from freezing.

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  76. Keiffer says:

    *John Dillinger once broke out of a federal prison by making a fake gun out of soap. He carved the gun with a plastic spoon he stole from the cafeteria and used shoe polish to paint it black. The guard, thinking that the soap gun was real, gave Dillinger his own gun which he knew was loaded. Dillinger was then escorted by this guard out of the prison.

    *If a statue in the park of a person on a horse has both front legs in the air, the person died in battle; if the horse has one front leg in the air, the person died as a result of wounds received in battle; if the horse has all four legs on the ground, the person died of natural causes.

    *The word “Checkmate” in chess comes from the Persian phrase “Shah Mat,” which means “the king is dead”.

    *Only 47 decimal places of pi would be sufficiently precise to inscribe a circle around the visible universe that doesn’t deviate from perfect circularity by more than the distance across a single proton.

    *There are coffee flavored PEZ.

    Those are all from totally useless knowledge .com.

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  77. bubblebabe225 says:

    Ewww!
    In 1934, 42% of the world’s iron ore was located in the United States.

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  78. bubblebabe225 says:

    Thanks ever so, speller73!!!
    At the beginning of Island of the Blue Dolphins, there were 42 men in the tribe of Ghalas-at.

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  79. bubblebabe225 says:

    SFT(eternal)DP.
    On the Old Town Trolley Tours in Boston, one bus has a capacity of 42 people.

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  80. Keiffer says:

    *The angle at which light reflects off water to create a rainbow is 42 degrees.
    *There are 42 decks on the USS Enterprise.
    *The right arm of the Statue of Liberty is 42 feet long.
    www (dot) ellen burgess (dot) com

    www (dot) medieval (hyphen) castles (dot) org
    :twisted: When a victim refused to reveal sensitive information, he or she would be subject to the thumbscrew. The victim’s hands were placed in the device and the torturer would crush the victim’s fingers slowly.
    *The place where Dracula’s body is being kept is unknown. According to tradition, they are in a coffin underneath a monastery in Snagov Lake. Of course when archeologists went to confirm the legend, they found several corpses but all of them had a head – contrary to the well documented fact that Vlad the Impaler’s head was removed by the Turks and then taken to Constantinople.

    Of course the monastery wasn’t completely searched and that leaves room for possibility of the corpse being hidden in an undiscovered chamber. Nevertheless, the legend also states that the corpse was in fact buried underneath the entrance of the [name] monastery – which was dug and nothing found. It is also believed that the corpse of Vlad the Impaler himself simply disappeared. When archeologists found an empty coffin with ancient crosses and some prayers, paranormal fanatics were fascinated. The origins of this mysterious coffin are unknown and whether it belonged to Dracula or not – is a mystery. Additionally, the monastery of [name] is very near a lake which makes it extremely humid and thus; most corpses decomposed making them completely unrecognizable. Dozens of corpses have been found underneath the monastery, but of course; all of them had a head as I stated above. Except the empty one, obviously.

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  81. Ambystoma Maculatum and Joolb (~)_+) says:

    Apparently, it is very easy to hypnotize a chicken.
    That is from a book called Children’s Miscellany

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  82. FantasyFan?!?! says:

    One of the (supposedly optional) essay topics for the University of Pennsylvania is to write page 217 of your 300-page biography. Why couldn’t it have been page 42?

    This comes from the University of Pennsylvania’s application Supplement, 2010. If you look up their admissions page you can find it quite easily.

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  83. bubblebabe225 says:

    Thanks Keiffer! *is relieved not to have to post a double post*
    VERY interesting 42 fact I found in the Boston Globe, get over here KaiYves please, and tell me if you’ve heard of this yet!
    The planet GJ 1214b is 42 light years away from Earth. It is almost covered with oceans thousands of miles deep. There MIGHT be life on it, however, some scientists believe that the atmosphere is too dense and hot to support life. It will eventually pass in front of our sun.
    :shock: I hope there’s some form of life on it!

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  84. bubblebabe225, the Bunny Lover says:

    I just found this out on Wikipedia – our house is at 42 degrees on a line of latitude or longitude! ( I don’t know which ).

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  85. bubblebabe225, the Bunny Lover says:

    Elvis Presley died at 42 years old. Sorry for the TRIPLE post *coughsomeonecomeandpostonherecough*

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    • shadowfire says:

      I DON’T CARE WHAT IT SAYS, I NEVER LAID A FINGER ON HIM.
      Sorry, couldn’t resist.

      Two:
      There is a pineapple in every episode of Psych.
      If Barbie were life-size, her measurements would be 39-23-33. She would stand 7′ 2″ tall.

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  86. KaiYves- Water? YES! says:

    The first pulsars were thought to be signs of extraterrestrial intelligence and nicknamed “LGM”, for “Little Green Men”.

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  87. Silver Lining says:

    42 fact– The other day my friend and I were playing Words With Friends (Scrabble) on our iPods. I suddenly realized that both of our current scores were 42. The word that I had just put down was “Answer.” Scariest coincidence ever? Yes.

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  88. KaiYves- Water? YES! says:

    87- I walked into a room to ask my brother for his laptop (Which he didn’t want to give me), just as “I Hate You (My Friend)” started playing from the TV. So he started singing along to give me an answer: “No on here likes you, go away, get a clue.”

    And me? I just fell over laughing at the coincidence.

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  89. Princess_Magnolia says:

    I had a really random fact, but I forgot. Grrr!!!

    Here’s one, anyway:

    In California in the 60s, some rabid female fans ate some grass that Ringo Starr walked on.

    I like the phrase “rabid fans” :D

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  90. You Are Never Safe Without A Towel says:

    Did you know: The heart of a shrimp is in its head?

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  91. Princess_Magnolia says:

    In April 1801, John Adams appointed 42 justices of the peace to the District of Columbia.
    Soccer Starr is 42 on the “Who’s Posted How Much?”
    This is approximately my 825th post.
    I think I post too much.

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  92. KaiYves- Unity, Destiny, Tranquility! says:

    The last episode of the first season of every one of Aaron Sorkin’s shows is titled “What Kind of Day Has It Been?”

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  93. Princess_Magnolia says:

    *looks up Unity, Destiny, Tranquility on Wikipedia*

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    • KaiYves- Unity, Destiny, Tranquility! says:

      (It’s the American components of the International Space Station. Tranquility is going up on the next flight.)

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      • LittleBasementKitten and Mayl (->-) and Kityera (^>^) (Halena, Cailin, Lorelei,...I give up) says:

        Here’s a fact/opinion: Scientists name distant, mysterious planetswe know nothing about things like R27Q-45 and parts of spaceships that we know all about things like Unity, Destiny, and Tranquility. *fumes about non-creative scientists*

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  94. bookgirl_me says:

    Random factoid: Andromeda episodes (in the first few seasons) are usually 42 minutes long (sometimes 44 min, but you get the picture).

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  95. Keiffer says:

    On the April Bunny Thread, it took me exactly 42 seconds to scroll down through post 84.
    (Bunny Thread, April 2, 2007)

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  96. Princess_Magnolia says:

    42 was Jackie Robinson’s number; it is the only number to have been retired by all the teams in Major League Baseball.

    Al Smith was the 42ed governor of New York State.

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  97. Pseudonym says:

    When Paul was writing Yesterday, he thought of the melody first. Since he didn’t have any lyrics, he sung “Scrambled Eggs,” so that was the working title. :) I don’t remember where I got this. One of the many, many things I’ve read about the Beatles. I think it’s accurate though, because I’ve seen it in a couple places. * rambles *

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  98. Princess_Magnolia says:

    Saint Cornelius is the patron saint of twitching.

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  99. Princess_Magnolia says:

    In curling, the stone weighs 42 pounds. SFTDP.

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  100. Princess_Magnolia says:

    SFTTP. Post here, Keiffer, since you’re calling me “obsessed” with the thread. :razz:

    In the first radio address from the White House, the address was broadcast over 42 stations.

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  101. KaiYves- Unity, Destiny, Tranquility! says:

    The space shuttles were all built at Plant 42 in Palmdale, California.

    (That explains so much…)

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  102. Keiffer says:

    Lady Gaga’s first name is Stephenie!!!!!! Wow. I didn’t know that.
    Oh, and she’s bisexual.

    My older sister is watching a video on YouTube. That’s where it’s from.

    (Sorry if that’s not okay or whatnot, but it came as a surprise to me.)

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  103. KaiYves- Unity, Destiny, Tranquility! says:

    Disneyland and Disney World, despite being located on separate coasts in separate states, both happen to be located in an Orange County.

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  104. Silver Lining says:

    Two 42 facts for Maggie: As of today, there are 42 days left in my school year.
    In the King and Queen of Hearts’ court, rule number 42 is that all persons exceeding the height of a mile are not allowed. (Or something like that, sorry for not having a direct quote).

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  105. Princess_Magnolia says:

    The Pantanal Swamp in Brazil, the largest swamp in the world, is 42,000 square miles.

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  106. Princess_Magnolia says:

    According to the A=1, Z=26 rule, the letters x-k-c-d add up to 42.

    Enc told me that.

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  107. Enceladus says:

    The original series of Doctor Who ran for…. 42 years.

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  108. Cat's Eye says:

    FACT: There are no poisonous snakes in Maine.
    FACT: Bears. Eat. Beets.

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  109. Adeia says:

    If you put “the meaning of life, the universe, and everything” into google, the calculator will read 42 and, if put into an eqution will treat it as 42 and give you the correct answer.
    same thing if you put in “number of horns on a unicorn”
    If you try to find directions from china to japan (or visversa I can’t remeber) in google maps one of the directions will involve kakayking across the ocean…. It might be 42!

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    • Bluefire27 and Drake (^o^) says:

      When I used “the number of horns on a unicorn”, Google treated it as one. Or is that what’s supposed to happen?…

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  110. Princess_Magnolia says:

    Ernie Harwell spent 42 years as a Tigers announcer.

    Bonus points if you actually know who that is. I just saw it watching baseball.

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  111. Princess_Magnolia says:

    REALLY REALLY sad 42 fact.

    42% of college graduates never read another book after they graduate college. ( I read this in Entertainment Weekly )

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    • KaiYves- Hail, Atlantis! says:

      That is awful.

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    • Kokonilly says:

      No offense, but I find that really hard to believe.

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      • Piggy says:

        I concur. Entertainment Weekly is about as believable as, say, the internet.

        FALSE FACT ABOLISHED

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        • Pseudonym says:

          I think that opinion is supported by the fact that Entertainment Weekly thought cupcakes were “out”.

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        • Princess_Magnolia says:

          It was this columnist who was writing an article on summer books you should be reading. And I refuse to abolish the fact.

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          • Bluefire27 and Drake (^o^) says:

            In my opinion, it doesn’t matter who’s right, since false facts are still facts. And it is a very random fact, be it false or not.

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            • Piggy says:

              False facts are not facts at all. The very phrase “false fact” is an oxymoron.

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              • Yes, trueness is still considered part of the definition, last I heard. But also, to be fair, you can’t automatically judge whether something is factual because it appeared in “Entertainment Weekly.” (You’re certainly entitled to be wary, however. Even when the facts are technically correct, interpretation or presentation might distort their meaning.)

                Anyway, here are a couple of statistics I found in a brief search. In 2007, according to information from the publishing industry itself, 27% of U.S. adults said they had not read any books for pleasure; the figure was 31% in Canada.

                The 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy found that “the percentages of adults who reported reading less than once a week or never was 15 percent for newspapers or magazines, 38 percent for books, and 20 percent for letters and notes.”

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                • Princess_Magnolia says:

                  That article also said that 57% of Americans read for pleasure at least occasionally.

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                • Kokonilly says:

                  Really? I was taught that it was something that was simply proven, so in theory it could be proven inaccurate, making it a false fact. But yes, I wasn’t judging the source but that it just seems so unlikely. I’m also apt to be skeptical about your facts, Lady B, again because it just seems so unlikely. But those sources seem legitimate, which saddens me.

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        • Princess_Magnolia says:

          It turns out that STEPHEN KING writes a column in Entertainment Weekly and that STEPHEN KING was the one who used that fact. Does that make it sound more credible to any of you?

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          • Kokonilly says:

            Isn’t he the political pundit No, sorry. That’s Stephen Colbert. My mistake.

            The fact that he’s an author does not lessen my skepticism, I’m sorry to report. I seem to steadfastly hold to the idea that the entire world is like my family.

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          • Thanks For All The Fish42 says:

            Well, whether or not he’s a good author, he might not be as skeptical of the poll that he is referring to as, say, a Museblogger is.

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    • fireandhemlock1996 says:

      I know that my cousins, at least, will be among that percentage.

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    • Rainbow*Storm says:

      “Why are you reading? It’s SUMMER.”
      ~ Random person

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  112. shadowfire says:

    Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia is fear of long words.

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  113. Optimatum (18.5 wung points) says:

    floccinaucinihilipification:

    1, to estimate something as worthless; 2, to cause something to become worthless by estimating it as worthless

    From the Latin ‘floccin non facio’, meaning “I don’t give a hoot”. Lit: “It is not worth a wisp of hair.”

    Longest word in the english language to not include an ‘e’.

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  114. Mikazuki says:

    Maine’s coastline is aproximately 3478 miles long. That is bigger than the state of Rhode Island. 8O

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  115. Mikazuki says:

    SFTDP Oh, and it came from a school report that I had to do. Or, more accurately, my school textbook.

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  116. leloochlover101 says:

    Ok, if lifes a game, what is a game, who are you playing against, what are the rules, and you cant win life if in the end you always die. Plus you only get one life.

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  117. Princess_Magnolia says:

    42 people have run the Boston Marathon 25 consecutive times.

    -Some runner’s magazine, or Sports Illustrated, or The Boston Globe…I don’t really remember.

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  118. Randomosity101 says:

    Venus Flytraps are native to North Carolina, and most pitcher plants that thrive in temperate climates are tiny compared to most tropical-dwelling pitchers.

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