1 Will Smith and Eminem
In the late 90’s when Eminem played his then-unreleased song ‘Just The Two Of Us’ for Will Smith, he said: “You’re either gonna be the biggest flop in Hip Hop, or you’re gonna be the biggest thing that we’ve ever seen in Hip Hop.”
2. In Finland, doctoral candidates who receive a Ph.D. also receive a top hat and a sword.
3. A man named Walter Macfarlane while searching for his father ended up finding out that his best friend since grade school was actually his brother (Alan Robinson). The men are 15 months apart in age and have known each other for decades.
4. If you remove a box turtle from the wild and don’t put them back in the location you found them they will most likely die looking for their home.
5. If you were to live in a basement all your life, you would live 90 billionth of a second longer than those living on the surface. When the pull of gravity is stronger, time moves slower. Therefore time moves faster upstairs.
6 Beavers
Canada sent 50 beavers to Argentina in 1946. They have now become pests, number over 100,000 and are destroying Argentina’s forests.
7. Lemony Snicket named the Baudelaire Children in his book “A Series of Unfortunate Events” after Charles Baudelaire, a French poet that said, “Evil is committed without effort, naturally, fatally; goodness is always the product of some art.”
8. Cheetahs can’t roar. They can only meow because of the absence of the hyoid bone in its neck.
9. The German word, Verschlimmbessern, is used to define the act of making something worse in a failed attempt to improve a situation, e.g. trying to dislodge a ball stuck in a tree by throwing another ball at it – which subsequently also gets stuck.
10. Your foot doesn’t fall asleep because of its blood flow being cut off. It happens when the nerves are compressed for a prolonged time.
11 Bill Speakman
During the Korean War, a British soldier named Bill Speakman led a series of grenade-hurling assaults against waves of Chinese soldiers attacking his post. When he ran out of grenades, he began hurling beer bottles, giving his unit enough time to retreat and stood his ground until he ran out of things to throw.
12. Hummingbirds are only native to the Americas.
13. Film director Richard Stanley once escaped from war-torn Afghanistan with his wounded cameraman after despite being on LSD that he took earlier. He said the LSD saved his life as he could see in the dark and believed he could smell the landmines.
14. American political commentator Oliver North solicited $10,000,000 from the Sultan of Brunei as a way around US rules on funding Contras in Nicaragua. The money never went to them, but to a Swiss businessman instead because North entered the wrong bank account number.
15. 14 years before the Titanic sank, a book named “Futility” (or “The Wreck of the Titan”) told the story of an unsinkable ship named “Titan” which also struck an iceberg on its starboard side in the North Atlantic on an April night. The fictitious ship closely matched the Titanic’s length, weight, speed, capacity, and lack of lifeboats.
16 James Eagan Holmes
In 2012, James Eagan Holmes, the guy who committed the Aurora shooting during the premiere of The Dark Knight Rises, was sentenced to 13 life sentences in prison, with an additional 3,318 years for rigging his apartment with bombs and 140 counts of attempted murder.
17. An American doctor named Dr. Ian Crozier survived Ebola after contracting the virus in his eye, which turned it green. He regained his eyesight by taking a non-FDC approved experimental secret drug.
18. In 1932, General Macarthur and Major Patton tear-gassed World War I veterans calling themselves the “Bonus Army.” They had marched on Washington demanding full payment for their service during World War I. 2 vets were killed. Historians claim that without the protest, there may have never been a GI Bill.
19. Polynesians may have traveled to the Americas in pre-Columbian times. Sweet potatoes which originated from the Americas were found in the islands when Captain James Cook discovered them. The Maori word for sweet potato “kumala” is almost the same as the Quechuan’s word “k’umara” for sweet potato.
20. Iceland used to have birch forests, but the Viking settlers cut them down and later their sheep ate the saplings, preventing any kind of forest regrowth. This led to the barren landscape we see in Iceland today.
15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History
21 Henrietta Jackson
In 1894, a female cook named Henrietta Jackson at Cornell University was killed when freshmen redirected chlorine gas into the kitchen as part of a hazing prank.
22. The Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea is 330 meters (1,080 feet) tall and was intended to be world’s tallest hotel but these days it is the tallest unoccupied building in the world.
23. The sky in the famous painting “The Scream” is red probably because of the worldwide effects of Krakatoa’s eruption in 1883, which launched particles in the air that changed the sky color for about 5 months.
24. In 1997, the FDA rules governing pharmaceutical advertising changed, allowing companies to name their drug and what it’s for, while only naming the most significant potential side effects. Nielsen estimates there’s an average of 80 drug ads every hour on American television, up from 3 in 1996.
25. A species of wasp is named Ampulex dementor after the Dementors in Harry Potter. This name was chosen to reflect the fact that the wasp uses a toxin to neutralize the neural behavior of cockroaches and make them docile as if their souls had been sucked out.
19. Polynesians may have traveled to the Americas in pre-Columbian times. Sweet potatoes which originated from the Americas were found in the islands when Captain James Cook discovered them. The Maori word for sweet potato “kumala” is almost the same as the Quechuan’s word “k’umara” for sweet potato.
Is all wrong. The Maori people are from Hawaii and their name for sweet potato is Kumara not Kumala.
Yes. I just learned about this in my Hawaii History class.