42 Entertaining Random Facts You’ll Love To Know | Random List #168

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1Promise School

Promise School

At the LeBron James’ “Promise School”, at-risk students have 8-hour days, a longer school year and receive free meals, bikes, and tuition.


2. Dr. Seuss drew anti-Japanese cartoons during World War 2. When he met the survivors of Hiroshima, he realized “A person is a person no matter how small.” He later created “Horton Hears a Who!” as an apology, dedicating it to a Japanese friend.


3. An Escher sentence is a comparative sentence that seems to make sense but doesn't on closer inspection. For example, “more people have been to Russia than I have.”


4. The character Oscar the Grouch has gone on record as being a Canadian, though he tries to keep his Canadian identity a secret because he doesn't want people to like him.


5. When NBC decided to air 'The Office' after the Super Bowl, executives encouraged the show's producers to cast celebrity guest stars. They booked Jack Black, Jessica Alba, and Cloris Leachman but instead of writing them in with the regular cast, they starred in a fake movie which the cast watched.


Latest FactRepublic Video:
15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History


6Eagles

Eagles

While the Eagles were recording their Hotel California album, they had to stop recording "on numerous occasions" because Black Sabbath was in the same studio, and was so loud the sound was coming through the walls.


7. 40 real squirrels were trained to crack nuts for Charlie & the Chocolate Factory instead of using CGI.


8. In the original airing of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” Rudolph visited the island of Misfit Toys and promised to help them, but never actually did. Tons of children wrote to Rankin-Bass, concerned for the toys, and got the company to make another scene showing the toys had been saved.


9. Ivan Kharchenko was named a Hero of the Soviet Union and awarded an Order of Lenin and Gold Star for defusing more than 26,000 explosives during the battles of Stalingrad and Kiev. He continued his job until 1956, disarming 16,000 more munitions along the way, finally retiring in 1964.


10. Aki Ra is a former Khmer Rouge conscripted child soldier who has devoted his life to removing landmines in Cambodia and to caring for young landmine victims. Since 1992, he has personally removed and destroyed as many as 50,000 landmines, and is the founder of the Cambodian Landmine Museum.


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11Solitaire

Solitaire

1 in 400 solitaire hands is totally unplayable, meaning "no cards can be moved to the foundations even at the start of the game."


12. Hollywood occasionally sees a phenomenon called Twin Films in which two films with the same or very similar plots are produced or released at the same time by two different film studios. Some popular examples include Finding Nemo/Shark Tale, Olympus has Fallen/White House down, Churchill/Darkest Hour, The Prestige/The Illusionist.


13. In 2012, a 9-year-old boy named Brendan Haas decided he wanted to help the families of fallen US soldiers. He started a Facebook page and eventually traded up to $900 worth of Disney gift certificates, airfare, and hotel credits. He then gave the trip to a 2-year-old girl named Liberty Hope who had lost her father in Afghanistan.


14. The belief that using a cell phone at a gas station can cause a fire or explosion is a common urban legend. It has never happened anywhere in the world. Experts believe it to be impossible as no-one has been able to successfully create a fire or explosion by using a cell phone while fueling a car.


15. Precordial catch syndrome is a condition where you get random harmless stabbing pains in the chest.


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16Avatar

Avatar

During the filming of Avatar, the lead visual effects company, Weta Digital, hired 900 people to work on the movie at one time. To render Avatar, Weta made use of 4,000 Hewlett-Packard servers with 35,000 processor cores with 104 TB of RAM and 3 PB of network area storage.


17. The paper sleeve around your coffee cup is called a zarf and they have existed in various forms for over 800 years.


18. A fish at the Vancouver Aquarium was given a prosthetic eye so it wouldn't be bullied by other fish.


19. Most stars exist in binary or triple star systems. It is hypothesized that up to 85% of stars are gravitationally bound to another star in a multiple star system. Therefore, solitary stars (such as the Sun) are actually not the norm in the universe, but in fact are a rarity.


20. Octopuses have been observed acquiring shiny and reflective objects and planting them around their homes in the seabed like a garden. The song “Octopus’s Garden” by the Beatles was inspired by the captain of a boat informing Ringo Starr of this fact while on vacation.


21Louise Fletcher

Louise Fletcher

Actress Louise Fletcher, who won an Oscar for Nurse Ratched in ‘One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest’ and played Kai Winn on ‘Star Trek: Deep Space Nine,’ was born to parents who were both deaf. She was taught to speak by a hearing aunt, who also introduced her to acting.


22. Ernst Röhm was a close friend of Hitler, a top Nazi leader, and a homosexual. Hitler was aware of Röhm's homosexuality. They were so close they addressed each other as du (German familiar form of "you"). No other top Nazi leader enjoyed that privilege.


23. 75% of “photography” in the IKEA catalog is actually not photography at all, it’s CGI.


24. To be an alumni you don't need to actually graduate but instead just have attended the school.


25. USA once fed information to the USSR about an extremely deadly nerve gas called “GJ” that was nearly impossible to create. Although initially intended to waste Soviet resources on a wild goose chase, Soviet scientists were successful in replicating “GJ” and produced the now-infamous Novichok agents.

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