online marketing Trivia 5 - Bizarre Facts III ~ Trivia Pick of the Day

Friday, December 9, 2011

Trivia 5 - Bizarre Facts III

On an American one-dollar bill, there is an owl in the upper left-hand corner of the "1" encased in the "shield" and a spider hidden in the front upper right-hand corner.
On the new one hundred dollar bill the time on the clock tower of Independence Hall is 4:10. 
One of the reasons marijuana is illegal today is because cotton growers in the 30s lobbied against hemp farmers -- they saw it as competition. It is not chemically addictive as is nicotine, alcohol, or caffeine.
Only female mosquitoes bite. 
Orcas (killer whales) kill sharks by torpedoing up into the shark's stomach from underneath, causing the shark to explode. 
Other than humans, black lemurs are the only primates that have blue eyes. 
Our eyes are always the same size from birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing. 
Pamela Lee-Anderson is Canada's Centennial Baby, being the first baby born on the centennial anniversary of Canada's independence. 
Panama hats come from Ecuador not Panama. 
Peanuts are used in the production of dynamite. 
Pearls melt in vinegar. 
Pinocchio is Italian for "pine eyes." 
Pogonophobia is the fear of beards. 
Polar bear fur is not white, it's clear. 
Race car is a palindrome. 
Ralph Lauren's original name was Ralph Lifshitz. 
Residents of the island of Lesbos are Lesbosians, rather than Lesbians. (Of course, lesbians are called lesbians because Sappho was from Lesbos.) 
Revolvers cannot be silenced, due to all the noisy gasses which escape the cylinder gap at the rear of the barrel. 
Rhythm and "syzygy" are the longest English words without vowels. 
Robert E. Lee, of the Confederate Army, remains the only person, to date, to have graduated from the West Point military academy without a single demerit. 
Roosters can't crow if they can't fully extend their necks. 
Russians generally answer the phone by saying, 'I'm listening.' 
S.O.S. doesn't stand for "Save Our Ship" or "Save Our Souls" -- It was chosen by an 1908 international conference on Morse Code because the letters S and O were easy to remember and just about anyone could key it and read it, S = dot dot dot, O = dash dash dash. 
Samuel Clemens's pseudonym "Mark Twain" was the nickname of a riverboat pilot about whom Clemens wrote a needless nasty satirical piece. Apparently, Clemens felt guilty later and adopted the nom de plume as some sort of expiation. The phrase "mark twain" from which the river pilot got his name does not mean two fathoms (twelve feet.) 
Sharon Stone was the first "Star Search" spokes model. 
Smithee is a pseudonym that filmmakers use when they don't want their names to appear in the credits. 
Snails can sleep for 3 years without eating. 
Soda water does not contain soda. 
Some Eskimos have been known to use refrigerators to keep their food from freezing. 
Soweto in South Africa was derived from SOuth WEst TOwnship. 
Spain literally means 'the land of rabbits.' 
Speak of the Devil is short for "Speak of the Devil and he shall come". It was believed that if you spoke about the Devil it would attract his attention and he would appear. 
St. Bernards, famous for their role as alpine rescue dogs, do NOT wear casks of brandy around their necks. 
Steve Young, the San Francisco 49ers quarterback, is the great-great-grandson of Mormon leader Brigham Young. 
Susan Lucci is the daughter of Phyllis Diller. 
Talk show host Montel Williams had a nose job.
Termites eat wood twice as fast when listening to heavy metal music. 
The "Grinch" singer and voice of Tony the Tiger is a man named Thurl Ravenscroft. 
The "save" icon on Microsoft Word shows a floppy disk, with the shutter on backwards. 
The allele for six fingers and toes is dominant in humans. 
The Andy Griffth Show was the first spin-off in TV history. It was spun-off from the Danny Thomas Show. 
The average person falls asleep in seven minutes. 
The average scalp has 100,000 hairs. Redheads have the least at 80,000; brown and black haired persons have about 100,000; and blondes have the most at 120,000. (That is more than a thousand hairs in each square inch!)
The band "Duran Duran" got their name from an astronaut in the 1968 Jane Fonda movie "Barbarella." 
The bat on the Bacardi symbol is there because the soil where the sugar cane grows is fertile from the excessive guano (bat droppings.) 
The Boston University Bridge (on Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts) is the only place in the world where a boat can sail under a train driving under a car driving under an airplane. 
The bubbles in Guiness Beer sink to the bottom rather than float to the top like all other beers. No one knows why. 
The car in the foreground on the back of a $10 bill is a 1925 Huptmobile. 
The car manufacturer Henry Ford was awarded Hitler's Supreme Order of the German Eagle. 
The childrens' nursery rhyme 'Ring-a-Round-The-Rosies' actually refers to the Black Death which killed about 30 million people in the fourteenth-century. 
The Chinese ideogram for 'trouble' depicts two women living under one roof'. 
The cigarette lighter was invented before the match. 
The correct response to the Irish greeting, "Top of the morning to you," is "and the rest of the day to yourself." 
The cruise liner, Queen Elizabeth 2, moves only six inches for each gallon of diesel that it burns. 
The Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper. 
The dome on Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's home, conceals a billiards room. In Jefferson's day, billiards were illegal in Virginia. 
The dunce cap of schoolhouse fame originates from a paper cone that was placed on the heads of accused witches during the Middle Ages. When Joan of Arc was martyred, she was wearing one of them. 
The Eisenhower interstate system requires that one-mile in every five must be straight. These straight sections are usable as airstrips in times of war or other emergencies. 
The famous split-fingered Vulcan salute is actually intended to represent the first letter ("shin," pronounced "sheen") of the word "shalom." As a small boy, Leonard Nimoy observed his rabbi using it in a benediction and never forgot it; eventually he was able to add it to "Star Trek" lore. 
The fingerprints of koala bears are virtually indistinguishable from those of humans, so much so that they could be confused at a crime scene.
The first Ford cars had Dodge engines. 
The first inter-racial kiss on TV was in an original "STAR TREK" episode entitled "Plato's Stepchildren". The kiss was between Nichelle Nichols and William Shatner. 
The first product Motorola started to develop was a record player for automobiles. At that time the most known player on the market was the Victrola, so they called themselves Motorola. 
The first safety razor was not actually invented by King Gillette himself but by a man named William Nickerson who was Kings partner. They believed that the label bearing Nickersons name would be bad for business, plus it was Kings idea anyway.
The first time the word "hell" was spoken on TV was in an original "STAR TREK" episode entitled "City on the Edge of Forever". The exact quote was "...let's get the hell out of here...", spoken by William Shatner. 
The first toilet ever seen on television was on "Leave It To Beaver". 
The 'Hundred Years War' lasted 116 years. 
The largest eggs in the world are laid by a shark. 
The launching mechanism of a carrier ship that helps planes to take off could throw a pickup truck over a mile. 
The lead singer of The Knack, famous for "My Sharona," and Jack Kevorkian's lead defense attorney are brothers, Doug & Jeffrey Feiger. 
The Les Nessman character on the TV series WKRP in Cincinnati wore a band-aid in every episode. Either on himself, his glasses, or his clothing. 
The lifespan of a tastebud is ten days. 

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