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-   -   Useless Information! AKA Trivia that you cannot live without! (http://www.butchfemmeplanet.com/forum/showthread.php?t=8427)

girl_dee 12-28-2017 05:33 AM

Who knew????
 
Caesar salad has nothing to do with any of the Caesars. It was first concocted in a bar in Tijuana, Mexico, in the 1920's.

girl_dee 01-10-2018 09:23 AM

Birthdays
 
Pat Benatar is 65 today :|
Don Fagen (Steely Dan) is 70. :|

charley 01-10-2018 11:10 AM

useless information, eh?
 
never cook bacon unless you are wearing clothing!
:canadian:

cathexis 01-10-2018 12:36 PM

A florescent light buzzes at a very high frequency which drives some people half mad, but most people don't hear it at all.

girl_dee 01-10-2018 01:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cathexis (Post 1192089)
A florescent light buzzes at a very high frequency which drives some people half mad, but most people don't hear it at all.

Yes and I think this causes headaches

girl_dee 01-10-2018 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by charley (Post 1192066)
never cook bacon unless you are wearing clothing!
:canadian:

I know there is a story here .... we’ll save it for chat :cheesy:

Femmewench 01-10-2018 03:00 PM

I'm sure this is going to be an answer on Jeopardy one day.

This is the only US state to include USA on its license plates.

What is New Mexico?


Lest we be confused with Mexico.

cathexis 01-11-2018 12:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by girl_dee (Post 1174385)
A 13th guest at a table is considered unlucky, and in Paris sometimes a quatorzieme is hired to be a professional 14th guest and balance out the luck.

Forgot about this. Some buildings, especially older ones, are constructed with no floor being referred to as the 13th floor. The buttons on the elevator may be numbered so that there is a 12th floor button then one for the 14th floor.

homoe 01-19-2018 12:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by charley (Post 1192066)
never cook bacon unless you are wearing clothing!
:canadian:

SO true........................:hangloose:

girl_dee 01-19-2018 03:54 PM

Dolly Parton is 77 today!



In 1996, scientists named the world's first cloned mammal -- a sheep -- after Dolly Parton. When asked about the name choice, Scientist Ian Wilmut said, "Dolly is derived from a mammary gland cell, and we couldn't think of a more impressive pair of glands than Dolly Parton's.”

Parton has been married to asphalt-paving business owner Carl Dean since May 30, 1966. She admits to staying faithful despite calling herself a flirt. "He knows I'm a flirt and a tease but it's harmless," said Parton. "I've never met the man that would take his place.

Dolly’s birth was paid for with a sack of oatmeal


Her family -- which included 11 siblings, herself the fourth -- was extremely poor when she was growing up in the backwoods of Tennessee's Great Smokey Mountains. "You know they always talk about two rooms and a bath? We had two rooms and a path. We'd have running water when we'd run to get it," Parton said. "We didn't have any electricity ... if fireflies were out, we'd catch them in a mason jar and put them in our bedroom!”

She once lost a Dolly Parton lookalike contest. "I just over-exaggerated my look and went in and just walked up on stage. I didn't win. I didn't even come in close, I don't think," she said.

She refused to sell Elvis Presley the publishing rights to her hit 'I Will Always Love You.' Elvis' manager called Parton the day before the recording session and told her that he and Presley wouldn't record any songs that they didn't have at least half of the publishing rights to. "It had nothing to do with Elvis, because hopefully he was disappointed too, but I just wouldn't let him have the publishing," said Parton.

Since she was 7-years-old, Parton has written approximately 5,000 songs. Parton considers herself a writer first and foremost -- singing has always come second. According to her website, Parton writes a song every two or three days, and she always makes time to write on her birthday. She wrote her first song about her corn-cob doll. She was not able to write yet, so her mother had to copy the lyrics for her.

girl_dee 01-26-2018 05:08 AM

1998 - President Clinton goes on national TV and states, "I want you to listen to me, I'm going to say this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.”

1784 - Benjamin Franklin writes a letter to his daughter expressing his disapproval of the eagle as our nation's symbol. He preferred the turkey.

1892- Bessie Coleman born d. 1926 American daredevil aviator. She was the world's first black female aviator to obtain a pilot's license (1921). Her father was of mostly Cherokee descent, making her also the first female of native American descent to earn a pilot's license. U.S. pilot schools were unwilling to take a black female student, so she learned French and went to Paris to earn her license. She died in a plane crash while preparing for a show. While flying as a passenger with a student pilot, the plane suffered a mechanical failure and spun out of control. Not seat belted in, she fell out of the plane and plummeted to her death. The pilot died in the crash.


RIP Ms Coleman!
https://236izu11yygk2uo6po3yerii7d6-...27-350x350.jpg

girl_dee 01-31-2018 06:20 PM

January 31 1940
 
The First Social Security Beneficiary

the first Social Security check, check number 00-000-001, was issued to Ida May Fuller in the amount of $22.54 and dated January 31, 1940.



Ida May Fuller was the first beneficiary of recurring monthly Social Security payments. Miss Fuller (known as Aunt Ida to her friends and family) was born on September 6, 1874 on a farm outside of Ludlow, Vermont. She attended school in Rutland, Vermont where one of her classmates was Calvin Coolidge. In 1905, after working as a school teacher, she became a legal secretary. One of the partners in the firm, John G. Sargent, would later become Attorney General in the Coolidge Administration.

Ida May never married and had no children. She lived alone most of her life, but spent eight years near the end of her life living with her niece, Hazel Perkins, and her family in Brattleboro, Vermont.

Miss Fuller filed her retirement claim on November 4, 1939, having worked under Social Security for a little short of three years. While running an errand she dropped by the Rutland Social Security office to ask about possible benefits. She would later observe: "It wasn't that I expected anything, mind you, but I knew I'd been paying for something called Social Security and I wanted to ask the people in Rutland about it."

Her claim was taken by Claims Clerk, Elizabeth Corcoran Burke, and transmitted to the Claims Division in Washington, D.C. for adjudication. The case was adjudicated and reviewed and sent to the Treasury Department for payment in January 1940. The claims were grouped in batches of 1,000 and a Certification List for each batch was sent to Treasury. Miss Fuller's claim was the first one on the first Certification List and so the first Social Security check, check number 00-000-001, was issued to Ida May Fuller in the amount of $22.54 and dated January 31, 1940.

girl_dee 02-03-2018 05:07 AM

The word "lethologica" describes the state of not being able to remember the word you want.


This happens to me a lot, and i think more as we get older!

VintageFemme 02-03-2018 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cathexis (Post 1192156)
Forgot about this. Some buildings, especially older ones, are constructed with no floor being referred to as the 13th floor. The buttons on the elevator may be numbered so that there is a 12th floor button then one for the 14th floor.

The building I work in, is like this with 20 floors. It does not list a 13th floor on the elevator buttons. The building is less than ten years old.

Tovah 02-03-2018 09:48 AM

The velociraptor screech from Jurassic Park was a recording of tortoises having sex.

girl_dee 02-03-2018 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tovah (Post 1196695)
The velociraptor screech from Jurassic Park was a recording of tortoises having sex.

:cracked: ,,,,,,,,,

girl_dee 02-03-2018 12:35 PM

Star Wars Trivia!
 
Chewbacca's voice was created by the original films' sound designer, Ben Burtt, from recordings of walruses, lions, camels, bears, rabbits, tigers, and badgers in Burtt's personal menagerie. The individual recordings were mixed at different ratios for Chewbacca's different utterances.

girl_dee 02-08-2018 03:43 AM

a group of pugs is called a grumble.


https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incomin...Walkergate.jpg

Femmewench 02-08-2018 01:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by girl_dee (Post 1196675)
The word "lethologica" describes the state of not being able to remember the word you want.


This happens to me a lot, and i think more as we get older!

Well now I can stop calling it the gift of menopause.

girl_dee 03-14-2018 08:13 AM

The actual quote is from Shakespeare's tragedy Julius Caesar (1599). The warning is uttered by a soothsayer who is letting Roman leader Julius Caesar know that his life is in danger, and he should probably stay home and be careful when March 15th, the Ides of March, rolls around.

Kätzchen 12-14-2018 11:00 AM

Calvin Trillin & Alice Trillin
 
I've been so tired lately from seeing T***P dominated news page coverage of their cry-baby temper-tantrums and chest thumping strategic lies behavior, that I went in search of Journalists who have contributed greatly to society.

So I spent the day yesterday, studying the life of Calvin Trillin.

Here's what I learned, after watching Johnny Carson interview Calvin Trillin, on JC's late night show, The Tonight Show:

Calvin Trillin married his wife by the same last name (Alice Stewart Trillin) back in 1965.... and Calvin's wife died on the day of the Nine-Eleven NYC Trade Tower attacks (source: Wiki).

Alice led an equally fulfilling life, like Calvin: She is best known for her work with cancer patients and for creating educational programming for underserved children and women.


At Alice's funeral service, Nora Ephron (of "When Harry Met Sally" fame) described the people under Trillin's protection as "anyone she loved, or liked, or knew, or didn’t quite know but knew someone who did, or didn’t know from a hole in a wall but had just gotten a telephone call from because they’d found the number in the telephone book" (source: Wiki)


For an partial list of Calvin Trillin's best known covered subject of literary interest, here's an interesting list of some of his better known works, as archived by The New York Times (LINK).

Here's the video of the Johnny Carson episode, back in November of 1988, that inspired me to research the life of Calvin Trillin:


girl_dee 12-15-2018 06:48 PM

Holiday Useless Facts!
 
The first known candy cane was made in 1670 by a German choirmaster to help children endure lengthy nativity services. They were white and modeled after shepherds’ canes. The candy cane made its way to America in 1847, when a German immigrant decorated the tree in his Ohio home with the iconic candy.

girl_dee 12-15-2018 07:14 PM

more......
 
Christmas trees first made an appearance with the ancient Egyptians and Romans. They used them to mark the winter solstice. The evergreens served as a reminder of the green plants that would come in the spring. However, it wasn’t until Prince Albert and his wife Queen Victoria of England appeared in a drawing in the Illustrated London News in 1848 that the tradition took off.

ksrainbow 12-15-2018 10:03 PM

Largest ball of twine

In Cawker City, officials have on display the largest ball of Sisal twine and it continues to grow ever year. Recently listed as being around 7,974,454 feet of Sisal twine rolled into a gigantic ball. A local farmer Frank Stoeber began winding his Sisal twine in 1953 and both locals and visitors continue the winding to this day.

I wrapped a few twines myself!

Ks-

C0LLETTE 10-27-2020 05:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by A. Spectre (Post 1163381)
Did YOU know radio call letters west of the Mississippi begin with the letter "K"? East of the Mississippi begin with the letter "W."

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...Cincinnati.jpg

In 1928, the Federal Radio Commission decided on a few rules that remain in effect to this day:

* all radio/TV call names were required to be four letters in length

* stations east of the Mississippi River were required to start their call names with ‘W’

* stations west of the Mississippi River were required to start their call names with ‘K’


https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.timetoas...peg?1476682081

No I didn't know this and it's really interesting.

DYK that Trump's grandfather had to flee Germany to dodge the military draft; ran brothels in Seattle and New York; and was never "Swedish".

Bèsame* 08-25-2022 06:41 AM

I found this out this morning...

How thin is a lightning bolt???

The width of a thumb and hotter than the sun
While the intensity of a lightning strike can make them appear as thick bolts across the sky, the actual width of a lightning bolt is only about 2-3 cm.,

cathexis 08-27-2022 01:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by C0LLETTE (Post 1277242)
No I didn't know this and it's really interesting.

DYK that Trump's grandfather had to flee Germany to dodge the military draft, ran brothels in Seattle and New York, and was never "Swedish."

Were radio and TV stations that only had three letters in their call sign "grand-fathered" in that 1928 ruling?
We have WLS and 6+ others. They're primarily radio stations, but some are television.


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