online marketing Trivia 4 - Bizarre Facts II ~ Trivia Pick of the Day

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Trivia 4 - Bizarre Facts II

Here is the next batch of bizarre facts and trivia:


John Wilkes Booth shot Lincoln in a theatre and was found in a warehouse. Lee Harvey Oswald shot Kennedy from a warehouse and was found in a theatre. 
John Wilkes Booth's brother once saved the life of Abraham Lincoln's son. 
June Foray, the voice of Talking Tina from the classic Twilight Zone episode "Living Doll", was also the voice of Rocky the talking squirrel from "Rocky & Bullwinkle". 
Kathleen Turner was the voice of Jessica Rabbit, and Amy Irving was her singing voice. 
King Kong is the only movie to have its sequel (Son of Kong) released the same year (1933). 
Lady Astor once told Winston Churchill 'if you were my husband, I would poison your coffee'. His reply ' if you were my wife, I would drink it!' 
Leonardo De Vinci invented the scissors. 
Lincoln Logs were invented by Frank Lloyd Wright's son. 
Liquid paper was invented by Mike Nesmith's (of the Monkees) mother, Bette Nesmith Graham, in 1951. 
Lizzie Borden was acquitted. 
Look at the number four on a clock face that uses Roman numerals. If the clock is made correctly then the Roman numeral four is wrong. The standard and correct way to write the Roman numeral four is "IV," but the traditional way to show it on a clock face is "IIII." Legend has it that a clock was made for a British king. When he saw the clock he mis- informedly corrected the clock maker who re-did the clock face to show a "IIII" instead of an "IV" thus not risking offending the king. Other clock makers followed suit so as not to embarrass the king. Now it is the traditional way to make clocks.
Lorne Greene had one of his nipples bitten off by an alligator while he was host of "Lorne Greene's Wild Kingdom." 
Lynyrd Skynard was the name of the gym teacher of the boys who went on to form that band. He once told them, "You boys ain't never gonna amount to nothin'." 
Melanie Griffith's mother is actress Tippi Hendren, best known for her lead role in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. 
Men leave their hotel rooms cleaner than women do. 
Michael Jordan makes more money from Nike annually than all of the Nike factory workers in Malaysia combined.
Months that begin on a Sunday will always have a "Friday the 13th." 
Montpelier, Vermont is the only U.S. state capital without a McDonalds. 
More money is printed daily for the Monopoly game than by the U.S. Treasury. 
More people are killed each year from bees than from snakes. 
Most Americans' car horns beep in the key of F. 
Mozart was buried in an unmarked pauper's grave. 
Mr. Rogers is an ordained minister. 
Nine pennies weigh exactly one ounce. 
Ninety eight per cent of the weight of water is made up from oxygen. 
No animal, once frozen solid (i.e., water solidifies and turns to ice) survives when thawed, because the ice crystals formed inside cells would break open the cell membranes. However there are certain frogs that can survive the experience of being frozen. These frogs make special proteins, which prevent the formation of ice (or at least keep the crystals from becoming very large), so that they actually never freeze even though their body temperature is below zero Celsius. The water in them remains liquid: a phenomenon known as 'supercooling.' If you disturb one of these frogs (just touching them even), the water in them quickly freezes solid and they die. 
No matter its size or thickness, no piece of paper can be folded in half more than 7 times. 
Non-dairy creamer is flammable. 
Oak trees do not have acorns until they are fifty years old or older. 
Of the six men who made up the Three Stooges, three of them were real brothers (Moe, Curly and Shemp.) 
On 15 April 1912 the SS Titanic sunk on her maiden voyage and over 1,500 people died. Fourteen years earlier a novel was published by Morgan Robertson which seemed to foretell the disaster. The book described a ship the same size as the Titanic which crashes into an iceberg on its maiden voyage on a misty April night. The name of Robertson's fictional ship was the Titan. 

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