Random Fact Sheet #101 – 40 Facts That Will Make You Scratch Your Head

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1Keith Richards

Keith Richards

Keith Richards went to court expecting a multi-year jail sentence but ordered to give a benefit concert for the blind instead.


2. Swingline didn't make red staplers until Mike Judge made them famous in the movie Office Space.


3. In Kenya, elephant dung is being used to make paper. Elephants excrete up to 50 kg of dung a day which can produce 125 sheets of paper. This helps save the indigenous tree population and forest from being destroyed, along with creating a need for the 7000 elephants left in Kenya.


4. Cesar Millan, also known as “Dog Whisperer,” had Jada Smith, wife of Will Smith, as one of his first clients. She was satisfied so much from his work that she paid for one-year of English tutoring so that he could be aired on the U.S. television.


5. United States of America has technically been a nation which follows metric system of measurement since 1975 but just hasn’t enforced the system onto private companies and people.


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6Charles Bronson

Charles Bronson

Charles Bronson, the tough guy actor of classic films like ‘The Magnificent Seven’ and ‘Death Wish’, grew up in abject poverty. He was the 11th kid among 15 siblings. His family was so poor that he once had to wear his sister’s dress to school. When he was 16, he mined coal for $1 per ton.


7. Buzz Lightyear's original name was Lunar Larry, before being changed to honor astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin.


8. Tongue twister ‘she sells seashells by the seashore’ is about a real girl named Mary Anning. She also happens to be one of the very first people to discover a massive dinosaur fossil. She found it at the age of 12 while looking for seashells to sell by the seashore.


9. Tatooine from Star Wars is a real town in Tunisia that is spelled Tataouine and it is famous for its cave dwellings.


10. In 1936, after being thrown from his horse, a jockey named Ralph Neves was pronounced dead, brought to the morgue, injected with adrenaline to the heart, jumped up, returned to the racetrack, and demanded to be allowed to ride the rest of his mounts that day.


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11Osama bin Laden

Osama bin Laden

Osama bin Laden left a will that he had written shortly after 9/11. In it, he urged his children not to join al-Qaeda and not to continue the Jihad.


12. After cutting off his ear, Vincent van Gogh painted a portrait of the doctor who treated him, then gave it to the doctor. The doctor hated it and used it to repair a chicken coop before giving it away. It's now worth $50 million.


13. In 2015, a team of architects in U.K. led by a man named Jonathan Wilson started an IndieGoGo campaign to raise $2.9 billion to build Minas Tirith, the beautiful city that was built into a mountainside in ‘Lord of the Rings.’


14. Trench coat was invented by Thomas Burberry during World War 1 to help crawl and walk through the trenches.


15. Conus geographus, a species of predatory cone snail is one of the most venomous animals on the earth. Its venom is a mix of hundreds of toxins which it delivers through a harpoon-like tooth and there is no known anti-venom.


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16Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan’s deterioration from Alzheimer’s got so bad that he once took a mini ceramic White House model out of his fish tank and when asked what he thought it was, he answered, “I don’t know, but it’s something to do with me.”


17. During World War 2, if a US submarine sank all the targets it engaged, it was considered a "clean sweep" and a broom was attached to the periscope to celebrate their accomplishment.


18. Tokyo has a huge modern arcade named ‘Anata No Warehouse’ which is made to look like a dystopian cyberpunk city.


19. While filming a scene in the live-action adaption of “Jungle Book” where Mowgli meets King Louie (voiced by Christopher Walken), director Jon Favreau spotted a cowbell on stage and said, “this is what Mowgli has to use.” Mowgli rings the bell to awaken Louie as an homage to Walken’s SNL skit.


20. In 1967, Kathrine Switzer was the first woman to run the Boston marathon with an official number. After realizing that a woman was running, race organizer Jock Semple went after her trying to stop. The photographs taken of the incident made headlines around the world.


21Heroin

Heroin

Heroin overdose is more likely to happen during relapse. People who use heroin long enough eventually build up a tolerance. People who get sober sometimes relapse but take a dose they were on at their worst. They unintentionally kill themselves by not realizing their tolerance dropped.


22. Seinfeld composer Jonathan Wolff rewrote the theme song for every single episode. He says, "The bassline is so simple it can start and stop for his jokes, hold for laughs, and that way I could architect each piece of music for each monologue, Lego-style.”


23. Nazi 'perfect Aryan' poster child was Jewish.


24. Each commercial airplane in the U.S. is struck by lightning more than once every year on average.


25. A jogger named Rachel Borch in Maine once drowned a rabid raccoon in a puddle after it latched onto her finger and would not release her.

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