1 Hailie homecoming
Eminem watched his daughter, Hailie, get crowned homecoming queen from an empty classroom in the school because he didn’t want to take the attention away from her.
2. In France, postmen will soon also have the job of checking on elderly citizens who live alone.
3. Eminem set the Guinness World Record with “Rap God” for most words in a hit single. The song has a record-breaking 1560 words in 6 minutes 4 seconds and averaging 4.28 words per second. One section of the song features 97 words in 15 seconds at 6.5 words per second.
4. When Sir Terry Pratchett was knighted, he forged his own sword from iron and meteorites just for the occasion.
5. The first Roman fire brigade was created to be very lucrative. Arriving at the scene, the firefighters did nothing while a price was negotiated. Failing to reach a deal, the structure was allowed to burn to the ground after which an offer was made to purchase it for a fraction of its value.
6 Peanut butter
In the US, peanut butter must contain 90% peanuts, otherwise, it must be called “peanut spread”.
7. A woman suffers from a rare genetic condition known as Urbach-Wiethe disease which hardens the amygdala. This has rendered her literally fearless. Scientists have exposed her to potentially terrifying experiences and none of them scared her.
8. Ken Jeong would add little inside jokes into the Hangover movie to make his wife, who was battling breast cancer, laugh when she watched it.
9. Ray Bradbury wrote the first draft of “Fahrenheit 451” on a coin-operated typewriter in the basement of the UCLA library. It charged 10¢ for 30 minutes, and he spent $9.80 in total at the machine.
10. Barbara Walters told Corey Feldman “you’re damaging an entire industry”, when he came forward about Hollywood abuse.
11 John Favreau
John Favreau credits Dungeons & Dragons with giving him a really strong background in imagination, storytelling, understanding how to create tone and a sense of balance.
12. In Ancient Thebes, there was a fairly successful band of warriors (Sacred Band of Thebes) consisting entirely of 150 gay couples. They were chosen based on the idea that “you fight better when trying to impress your lover”.
13. Theo Albrecht, co-founder of the discount store Aldi, negotiated his own ransom when he was kidnapped and held for 17 days. He later won tax relief on the ransom payment claiming it was a business expense.
14. The red liquid seeping out of a cooked rare steak isn’t blood. It is, in fact, a mixture of a protein called ‘Myoglobin’ and water. Myoglobin helps muscle tissue store oxygen and just like Hemoglobin, contains iron that turns red when it binds with oxygen.
15. Jackie Kennedy wore her blood-splattered pink Chanel suit for the rest of the day after JFK’s assassination. When asked to change her outfit, she replied: “I want them to see what they have done to Jack.”
16 Columbus
In 1493, Columbus mistook manatees for mermaids and wrote: “They are not so beautiful as they are said to be, for their faces had some masculine traits.”
17. The musical Hamilton has over 20,000 words and would take 4-6 hours to perform if songs were sung at traditional musical paces.
18. Tennis balls were traditionally black or white. They were changed to yellow in 1972 after research showed they were more visible on television.
19. From 1933 until 1977 there was a Presidential Yacht, but it was sold off by Jimmy Carter, and today raccoons live in it.
20. Some churches are using signal jammers to make the congregation stop using their mobile phones.
15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History
21 Samuel Morse
Samuel Morse invented the telegraph after he received a letter of his wife’s failing health and after she’d died.
22. In 1973, IBM offered its UPC barcode proposal to the grocery industry for free. The industry accepted a very close standard to their proposal. However, IBM also made the first technology capable of reading the barcodes and made tons of money selling the equipment to grocery stores.
23. The United States avoided the thalidomide tragedy because FDA inspector Frances Kelsey blocked its approval based on lack of safety data despite pressure from her FDA supervisors and the pharmaceutical company. Meanwhile, 10,000 thalidomide babies were born in Europe, Australia, and Japan
24. Joseph Pujol was a professional farter and highest paid performer at the Moulin Rouge. For his grand finale, he would play “La Marseillaise” through his anus and then blow out candles from yards away. Corseted women in the audience were known to pass out from laughter.
25. The city of Lexington Kentucky holds a Halloween parade every year in which citizens can sign up to dress as zombies and dance to Thriller behind a Micheal Jackson impersonator. The event has gotten so popular there are now six Micheal Jacksons throughout the city.
While it’s true the character was called The Hatter, the chapter is called A Mad Tea Party because the Cheshire Cat informs Alice about The Hatter and the March Hare, “visit either you like, they’re both mad.”