1 John Hennigan
In August 2016, a defendant named John Hennigan in the UK called a judge a “bit of a c*nt” and the judge replied with “you’re a bit of a c*nt yourself”.
2. Humans are the only mammals that develop breasts that are permanently enlarged.
3. Thomas Jefferson believed Jesus’s teachings were “the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man,” but that they had been appropriated by his followers, resulting in a Bible that contained both “diamonds of wisdom” and the “dung” of ancient political agendas.
4. In 2013, a Pizza Hut General Manager stood up and refused to force his employees (Tony Rohr) to work Thanksgiving, believing they should get to spend time with family instead.
5. The day after Thanksgiving is the busiest day for plumbers around the United States.
6 Arnold Schwarzenegger
Arnold Schwarzenegger started a bricklaying business when he first came to America and became a millionaire after buying and selling houses before he became an actor.
7. After its tourism sector boomed, Kazakhstan’s foreign minister thanked Sacha Baron Cohen in 2012 for the release of Borat after the country saw a 10 times increase in issued visas.
8. A Japanese professor named Dr. Kenji Sugimoto went on search to find out what happened to Einstein’s brain. He discovered that it was being kept in a mason jar by a retiree named Dr. Thomas Harvey in Kansas, who would occasionally shave off slices with a kitchen knife and mail it to people if they asked for some of it.
9. The Chinese use drones equipped with flame-throwers to fight trash stuck in power lines.
10. The famous American jazz pianist Jelly Roll Morton, at the age of 14 tricked his great-grandmother into believing that he was a night watchman at a barrelhouse when in fact he was working as a piano player in a brothel. In that atmosphere, he often sang smutty lyrics. He took the nickname “Jelly Roll”, which was slang for vagina.
11 Chernobyl power plant
The Chernobyl power plant continued operating and producing electricity until 2000, 14 years after the Chernobyl disaster.
12. 14% of the US adult population could not read in 2013.
13. The first emperor of China (Qin Shi Huang) died from drinking a mixture of mercury and powdered jade intended to give him eternal life.
14. The “Pompeii Masturbator” is a man who appears to have been forever immortalized in the midst of some personal time.
15. The British supermarket chain Iceland has an EU-wide trademark on their name, and takes legal action against Icelandic companies that use it. The Icelandic government has applied to have their trademark invalidated, so far without success.
16 Turkey
Tryptophan in turkey isn’t what makes us tired after Thanksgiving dinner, it’s the overeating of carbohydrates. Turkey contains no more tryptophan than chicken or beef, and nuts and cheeses actually contain more.
17. Despite its useful properties, the dandelion has grown to be regarded as a weed, as a result of the rise of lawn culture and marketing by pesticide companies.
18. Almost all cattle are descended from only 80 aurochs tamed in Northern Mesopotamia about 10,000 years ago.
19. A Chinese philanthropist named Run Run Shaw (1907-2014) gave $1 billion to fund education, aiding over 6000 construction projects. Because so many buildings (5000+) bear his name, Yifu, it is often confused with a generic name.
20. 92 Russians died for every 1 American in World War 2.
15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History
21 Mariana Trench
If you threw a stone overboard above the Mariana Trench (6.8 miles deep) it would take an hour for it to hit the ocean floor.
22. Hangovers cost an estimated $220 billion loss in productivity per year.
23. In 1921, “Black Wall Street” was the wealthiest Black community in America before being attacked by an angry mob which killed hundreds of Black residents and destroyed 35 city blocks.
24. A town in West Virginia named Mole Hill changed its name to Mountain, so they could literally make a mountain out of a mole hill.
25. Just as % stands for per cent, ‰ stands for per mille.
About #8 – There is a terrific book written about the journey Einstein’s brain took, by car, from Princeton all the way to California. In the car were the driver, Michael Paterniti (who is the author of the book), accompanied by Dr. Harvey. It’s a delightful story, and a terrific read. The name of the book is, “Driving Mr. Albert: A Trip Across America with Einstein’s Brain” by Michael Paterniti, published in 2001. Well worth purchasing and reading….
OOPS! I left out some details in my comment on #8. Dr. Harvey was the pathologist who did Einstein’s autopsy. He took the brain on the afforementioned trip, hoping to bring it to Einstein’s daughter in California. I don’t remember why it never made it there, but it ended up, for many years, in Lawrence, Kansas where Dr. Harvey had taken up residence
. In 1998, Harvey returned the remaining brain parts (it had been largely dissected into multiple parts) to Princeton. He died in 2007.
From what I read, Einstein had two sons and a daughter that died as a child.
#50 – “…To be sexy (to other chameleons)…” was that parenthetical explanation necessary? I’m as kinky as the next guy, but I draw the line way before things that were hatched from eggs.