Friday, September 19, 2008

Random Facts 28

Body Boil
The body gives off enough heat in 30 minutes to bring half a gallon of water to a boil.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.111.

eBay Second
There are $680 worth of eBay transactions each second, with approximately 18 million items for sale at any given moment.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.96.

Ikea

More copies of the Ikea catalog are printed each year than the Bible. 1 in 10 Europeans were conceived on an Ikea bed, according to the company.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.96.

Bridal Flowers
Brides originally carried a bouquet of flowers to hide their body odor.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.192.

State Disappearance
In 1784, a US state became incorparated into Tennessee. The state of Franklin, was in fact named after Benjamin Franklin.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.2.

Eiffel Tower Shrinkage
The Eiffel Tower shrinks six inches in winter.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.62.

Plants Cry
Plants that are not cared for will cry for help, a thirsty plant will make a high-pitched sound that is too high for humans to hear.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.63.

Finches Practice

Songs in their sleep.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.124.

Polar Bear Fur
Is not white, its clear. Polar bear skin is black. Their hair is hollow and acts like fiber optics, directing sunlight to warm their skin.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.129.

A Gallon of Milk
Is about 345 squirts froma cow’s udder.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.136.

Woodchuck

A study concluded that if a woodchuck could chuck would, it would chuck about 700 pounds.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.136.

Desert Rate
The Earth is turning to desert at a rate of 40 square miles per day.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.65.

Solar Eclipse Time
It’s impossible for a solar eclipse to last more than 7 minutes and 40 seconds.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.66.

Movie Costs
The average cost of making and marketing a major Hollywood movie in 2006 was $100.3 million.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.71.

The First Couple to be Shown in Bed
Together on primetime televisionm was Fred & Wilma Flinstone.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.167.

Woody Harrelson’s Father
Was a hitman convicted of assassinating a federal judge.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.76.

Mike Meyer’s Wedding Ring
Is his late father’s 1956 Encycloperdia Britannica Salesman of the Year gift.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.79.

Beatles Song A Day in the Life
Contains an ultrasonic whistle audible only to dogs at the end of the song.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.90.

The Godfather Orange Curse
In all three Godfather films, when you see oranges, there is a death (or close call) coming up soon.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.91.

Most Historical Figures Most Often Portrayed in Movies
Napoleon Bonaparte is featured in 194 films (as of January 2008), Jesus is in 152, & Abraham Lincoln is in 137.
The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.94.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Jelly Belly Flavors

50 Current Flavors (& 8 Original Flavors): A&W Cream Soda (’76 Orignal), A&W Root Beer (’76 Orignal), Berry Blue, Blueberry, Bubble Gum, Buttered Popcorn, Café Latte, Cantaloupe, Cappuccino, Caramel Apple, Caramel Corn, Chocolate Pudding, Cinnamon, Coconut, Cotton Candy, Crushed Pineapple, Dr. Pepper, French Vanilla, Grape Jelly (’76 Orignal), Green Apple (’76 Orignal), Island Punch, Jalapeño, Juicy Pear, Kiwi, Lemon (’76 Orignal), Lemon Drop, Lemon Lime, Licorice (’76 Orignal), Mango, Margarita, Orange Juice, Orange Sherbet, Peach, Peanut Butter, Piña Colada, Pink Grapefruit, Plum, Raspberry, Red Apple, Sizzling Cinnamon, Strawberry Cheesecake, Strawberry Daiquiri, Strawberry Jam, Tangerine (’76 Orignal), Toasted Marshmallow, Top Banana, Tutti-Fruitti, Very Cherry (’76 Orignal), Watermelon, Wild Blackberry.

Other Flavors (Discontinued/Renamed/Retired - R, Normal Promotional, Rookie Considerations, & others): Apple Pie a la (Cold Stone Creamery), Apricot (R), Baked Bean, Birthday Cake Remix (Cold Stone Creamery), Black Forest Cake (R), Buttered Rum, Buttered Toast (R), Candy Cane, Carrot Cake, Champagne Bubbles, Champagne Punch, Cherry Passion Fruit Smoothie, Chocolate Cherry Cake, Chocolate Devotion (Cold Stone Creamery), Cinnamon Danish, Cinnamon Popcorn, Cinnamon Toast (R), Cranberry, Dark Chocolate, Espresso, Fruit Bowl, Gingerbread, Gramma's Pumpkin Pie, Grape Crush Soda, Hawaiian Punch, Honey Biscuit, Honey Graham Cracker, Hot Chocolate, Hot Cider, Key Lime Pie, Mandarin Orange Mango Smoothie, Mint Mint Chocolate Chocolate Chip (Cold Stone Creamery), Mixed Berry Snoothie, Orange Crush Soda, Our Strawberry Blonde (Cold Stone Creamery), Passion Fruit, Peppermint Stick (R), Pineapple, Pineapple Pear Smoothie, Pomegranate, Roasted Garlic (R), 7-Up, Sour Apple, Sour Blueberry, Sour Cherry, Sour Grape, Sour Lemon, Sour Orange, Sour Peach, Sour Raspberry, Sour Strawberry, Sour Watermelon, Spearmint, Strawberry Banana Smoothie, Sweet Ginger, Tabasco Cinnamon, Wildberry.

Gross/Experimental Flavors:
Baby Wipes (BoS1), Bacon (BB), Black Pepper (BB, BoS1), Booger (BB, BoS1), Dirt (BB), Canned Dog Food (BoS2), Centipede (BoS2, aka Earthworm - BB), Earwax (BB, BoS1), Grass/Law Clippings (BB, AB), Horseradish (BB), Moldy Cheese (BoS1), Pencil Shavings (BoS1), Pickle (BB), Pumpkin Pie (BB), Rotten Egg (BB, BoS1), Sardine (BB), Sausage (BB), Skunk Spray (BoS1), Soap (BB), Spaghetti (BB), Spinach (BB), Toothpaste (BoS1), Vomit (BB, BoS1).

BB: Bertie Bott's Every Flavor Beans – flavors based on a product in the Harry Potter book series. The company discontinued this line in 2007.
Bo: BeanBoozled – 10 gross flavors made to look like regular flavors (which are included too). Series 1 (S1) launched January 2008, Series 2 (S2) dropped Ear Wax and Black Pepper for Canned Dog Food & Centipede launched in fall 2009.

Random Facts 27

Longest Kiss
The longest kiss listed in Guinness lasted 417 hours (2 weeks, 3 days and 9 hours).
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P.47

Assassination Associations of Lincoln & Kennedy
Abraham Lincoln was elected to Congress in 1846, John F Kennedy in 1946. AL was elected President in 1860, JFK in 1960. AL’s secretary was named Kennedy, and JFK’s was named Lincoln.
Both were partially concerned with civil rights, lost children while living in the White House, and were shot on a Friday in the head. AL was shot at the Ford theater, JFK was shot in a Ford Lincoln car.
Both were assassinated by Southerners, and succeeded by Southerners named Johnson. Andrew Johnson (succeeded AL) was born in 1808, and Lyndon Johnson (succeeded JFK) was born in 1908.
Both assassins were known by their three names, and are comprised of 15 letters. John Wilkes Booth was born 1839, Lee Harvey Oswald was born 1939. Booth ran from the theater and was caught in a warehouse, Oswald ran from a warehouse and was caught in a theater. Both were shot before their trials.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p.144-145.

Highest Parachute Jump
On August 16, 1960, US Air Force Captain Joseph W Kittunger Jr jumped (as part of a research program, Project Excelsior) off a platform of 102,800 feet by a high-altitude balloon. He wore a pressure suit, and after 4 minutes 36 seconds of free fall he reached a speed of 714 miles per hour and became the only human to break the sound barrier without being enclosed in a machine of some kind. He landed safely 13 minutes and 45 seconds after jumping.
The parachute, invented 120 years before the airplane, was intended to save people jumping from burning buildings. P. 149. Dead Sea FloatThe water in the Dead Sea is so salty that it is far easier to float than drown.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 120, 132-133.

Amazon River
The volume of water in the Amazon River is greater than the next eight largest rivers in the world combined.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 120.

Bible Notes & Catholic Customs
The Bible devotes some 500 verses on prayer, less than 500 verses on faith, and more than 2,000 versus on money and possessions. There are 49 different foods mentioned in the Bible (pistachios and almonds are the only nuts) – Salt is mentioned 30 times.
Daily Mass began AD 394. Catholic Council of Cathage broke the Bible into (all 39 books) the Old Testament and the (all 27 books) New Testament (and later the Apocrypha) in 397. Worship of images, relics, and cross began AD 788. Holy water blessed by a priest AD 850. Lent & Good Friday AD 998. Celibacy of the priesthood and nuns AD 1079. Rosery introduced by Peter the Hermit AD 1090. Confession of sins to priest AD 1215. Apocryphal books (12) added to the Bible in AD 1546.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p.10-11, 19-20.

World’s First Pac-Man Game
Played on July 23, 1999 by Billy Mitchell. It took him 6 hours to score the maximum possible 3,333,360 points by eating every fruit, power pellet, blue ghost, and dot for 256 boards without losing a single life. Technically the game has no end, but a bug makes it impossible to finish level 256.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 44-45.

Some Firsts Involving Women
The first woman to run for President was Victoria Woodhall in 1872. The first female newspaper editor was Ann Franklin in 1762, of the Newport Mercury in Newport Rhode Island. The first female artist inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame was Aretha Franklin in 1987. The first test-tube baby was Louise Brown from Lancashire in 1978. The first Magician to perform the trick of sawing a woman in half was Count de Grisley in 1799.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p.30, 32, 35, 43.

Peanut Butter
It takes more than 500 peanuts to make a 12-ounce jar of peanut butter. The FDA allows an average of 30 or more insect fragments and one or more rodent hairs per 100 grams of peanut butter.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 174.

Chocolate
There are about 30 milligrams of caffeine in the average chocolate bar, while a cup of coffee contains around 100-150.
FDA rules allow up to 60 insect fragments per 100 grams of chocolate.
Science News Magazine, 6.7.08, p.17. The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 183.

Alcohol Cloud
There is a cloud of alcohol in outer space (10,000 light-years from Earth) with enough alcohol to make 4 trillion trillion drinks.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 192.

Detergent Beer
For beer commercials, liquid detergent is added to the beer to make it foam more.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 195.

Oldest Trademark
Is the Bass symbol, a red triangle, registered in 1876.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 196.

Oldest Recipe
The world’s oldest known recipe is for beer.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 197.

Priciest per Bottle
The highest price ever paid for distilled spirits at auction was $79,552 for a 50-year-old bottle of Glenfiddich whisky in 1992.

The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 200

The Longest Film Title

Night of the Day of the Dawn of the Son of the Bride of the Return of the Revenge of the Terror of the Attack of the Evil, Mutant, Alien, Flesh-Eating, Hellbound Zombified Living Dead Part 2 in Shocking 2-D, in 1991.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 P. 223.

Current Facts 27

Bush’s Re-election & Immigration
The day after George W Bush was announced as re-elected in 2004, Canada’s main immigration website (which normally averaged 20,000 visitors a day) had 115 visitors.

The Best Book of Useless Information Ever #3, p.172

Tattoo Removal Cream
Cosmetic surgeons are now offering a cream called Rejuvi. Once injected into the skin the cream is absorbed by the pigmented cells and softens the ink, pushing it to the surface of the skin where it forms a scab. When the scab falls off after six to eight weeks, the ink goes with it. The reason a tattoo stays is that a coating is placed around the ink to protect it from the body's immune response. This cream makes the ink identifiable to the body so it rejects and heals itself.
“Unwanted Tattoos…” By Rebecca Camber, Daily Mail Posting, 8.27.08.

Northern Lights
The aurora borealis has been explained by five NASA satellites and 20 ground observatories who tracked the source. An explosion of magnetic energy 80,000 miles from Earth (relating to Earth’s magnetic field and solar winds). They discovered that Earth’s magnetic field extends into space and meets a solar wind about 1/3 of the distance to the moon and is stretched into thin lines like a rubber band. Solar energy surges strum the explosion we see and hear.
The Week Magazine, 8.8.08, v.8, i.373, p.22.

China’s Weather Control for Olympics
Cloud Seeding – which works by blasting clouds with substances, such as silver iodide, enlarge the size of a cloud’s droplets. Chinese meteorologists have tweaked the process to shrink droplets, preventing stormy clouds long enough from raining on the open roof stadiums. The Beijing Meteorological Bureau claims to have used similar techniques for events in 1993 & 1999. The country has the worlds largest weather engineering program ($90 million annually) and has been credited with generating 25% of the rainfall in certain providences.
Mental_Floss, Jul-Aug 2008, v.7, i.4, p.65.


Olympic Age
The average age of America’s Olympic athletes is now about 27, up from 24 a generation ago. Experts attribute the trend to advances in training and injury-recovery techniques, as well as rule changes that allow athletes to make money and still retain their Olympic eligibility. 21 members of the US team are 40 or older. –USA Today.
The Week Magazine, 8.8.08, v.8, i.373, p.18.

Beijing Olympics ‘08
Every gold medal captured in the Olympics typically costs a country $37 million in training costs. China ended with 51 gold medals (the most of any nation) and the US had the most overall medals at 110.
The depth of the pool in Beijing helped the speed of swimmers. The pool was 3 feet deeper than other Olympics, which reduced drag on a swimmers body by extending the bow wave from clashing with the stem wave (lessening the backward pull). Experts stress that the pool is within official size limits.
Dozens of political activists were arrested or beaten during the Games, as were 22 foreign journalists. Of the 77 Chinese who applied to demonstrate in official “protest zones,” not one was given approval, and many were arrested. Some (of the 1.5 million residents of Beijing who lost their homes to make room for the facilities) now face a year of “re-education through labor.”
NBC earned “a healthy return on its $894 million” investment in the Games – more than $100 million by some estimates. The Games drew more than 200 million US viewers. “Some investors have questioned the broadcasters fit with GE’s financial and industrial divisions,” but NBC’s Olympics-related profits could quell such doubts.
The Week Magazine, 9.5.08, v.8, i.377, p.4, 16-17, 19 & 34.


Digital (Contact-like) Lens
The digital lens contains metal circuits that are about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, produced with nanotechnology. Once all the circuits come together, the lens can run on solar energy. University of Washington assistant professor Babak Parviz elaborates that the lens will superimpose digital information onto your visional field. Here are some of the perks; a micro video camera that compares faces to a database and projects in your visual field their names (if you forgot) and personal information, take a tiny graphic from online and expand it on your visual field to see if a picture would look good on a wall in your home, follow step-by-step diagrams and instructions (for assembling furniture or fixing your transmission) on the real objects where light-emitting diodes superimpose the steps for you, instant translucent GPS maps, etc.
Mental_Floss, Jul-Aug 2008, v.7, i.4, p.18.


Internet Citizen Access
The US has 223.1 million citizens with internet access, China has 253 million.
The Week Magazine, 8.8.08, v.8, i.373, p.18.

Deadly Areas
The average American stands a 1 in 5,552 chance of dying in a plane crash (including small private planes), and a 1 in 247 chance in a car wreck. –NY Times. According to List Universe, here are the top 3 (of 10) Most Fatal Occupations (based on US statistics) - 3. Pilots & Flight Engineers (Crop Dusting, testing new and experimental flight equipment, etc) 88 out of 100,000 (~100 deaths last year), 2. Commercial Fisherman 142 out of 100,000 (~50 deaths last year), & 1. Cell Phone Tower Workers 184 out of 100,000 (~20 deaths last year).
The Week Magazine, 8.8.08, v.8, i.373, p.18. "Top 10 Most Fatal Occupations" Published on List Universe August 26, 2008.

Eco Pedal
Next year Nissan will introduce a gas pedal that pushes back when it senses drivers are accelerating too quickly. The “Eco Pedal” system can improve fuel efficiency by 5-10%. – Associated Press
The Week Magazine, 8.15.08, v.8, i.374, p.36.

More Oil Profits

ExxonMobile posted second-quarter earnings of $11.7 billion, the largest quarterly profit ever recorded by any company. –Houston Chronicle.
The Week Magazine, 8.15.08, v.8, i.374, p.36.

Texas Leads in Sex Ed Spending
Texas spends $17 million a year (more than any other state) on abstinence-only sex education programs. The rate of Texas high school students having sexual intercourse, according to federal statistics, stands at 52.9%, compared with 47.8 nationally. –Houston Chronicle.
The Week Magazine, August 1, 2008, v.8, i.372, p.18.

Product Placement
Advertisers spent a record $2.9 billion on product placement in 2007, a 33.7% increase over the previous year.-Los Angeles Times.
The Week Magazine, August 1, 2008, v.8, i.372, p.18.

Europeans McDonald’s Junkies
Europe has surpassed the US as the McDonald’s fastfood chain’s biggest region by revenue. Despite having about a quarter the number of locations as in the US, McDonald’s Europe earned $8.9 billion last year, versus $7.9 billion in the US. –BusinessWeek.com.
The Week Magazine, August 1, 2008, v.8, i.372, p.36.


Population
It took thousands of years of human history before the population hit 1 billion in 1800, and it took 130 years to reach the 2 billion mark. The Census Bureau projects that by 2012, the world's population will reach 7 billion (just 13 years after reaching 6 billion).
The Week Magazine, July 4-11, 2008, v.8, i.368/369, p.20.

Vinyl
Sales of turntables have spiked 500 percent every year for the past 4 years.
The Week Magazine, June 13, 2008, v.8, i.365, p.16.

Administration Departure
With 8 months left, 56% of 1,100 administration officials under Bush's direct control are either vacant or filled by temporary appointees.
The Week Magazine, June 13, 2008, v.8, i.365, p.16.

US Debt
The Federal Budget showed a surplus for the year 2001 of $281 billion (the largest in American history) and the ten-year surplus was projected to be $5.6 trillion. We wer on track to completely eliminate the national debt by 2009. As of April 2008, the total U.S. federal debt was approximately $9.5 trillion.
It's Still the Economy Stupid, Paul Begala, 2002, pg. 17.

Turning Bacteria into Oil
Bell Plantations in Tifton, Georgia are developing a way to convert bacteria into hydrocarbons in a matter of months, rather than the millions of years it takes for fossils to degrade into usable fuels. By genetically manipulating the bacteria, they believe they can produce different molecular chains to produce the basis for gasoline, diesel, propane and a variety of other hydrocarbon fuels. We should know pretty soon if this can work. If so, present plans call for 500 nationwide production facilities within 18 months, which would give Bell Plantations the capacity to produce up to 500,000 barrels a day within two years.
North Star Writers Group - Dan Calabrese, 5.26.08 Posting.

Trashed Food
Americans throw out about 27 percent of the 350 million pounds of food they buy every year.-The New York Times
The Week Magazine, May 30, 2008, v.8, i.363, p.18.

Transportation
From January through March ridership on public transit increased 3% nationwide to 2.6 billion rides.
Americans drove 1.4 billion fewer highway miles this April than they did in 2007, according to the US Department of Transportation. Since the beginning of the year, motorists have logged 20 billion fewer miles than they did last year at this time.
The Week Magazine, June 13, 2008, v.8, i.365, p.34.
The Week Magazine, July 4-11, 2008, v.8, i.368/369, p.20.

Spam
Hormels spam sales jumped 9% since the first of the year due to other high food pricings.
The Week Magazine, June 13, 2008, v.8, i.365, p.34.

Spoken Languages
There are roughly 6,500 spoken languages in the world today. About 2,000 of those are spoken by fewer than 1,000 people. The most widely spoken language in the world is Mandarin Chinese (with 885 million speakers in China alone).
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p.2.

Lipstick Usage

The average women uses up approximately her height in lipstick every 5 years.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p.47.

Popular in Sit-Down Restaurants

Fried chicken is the most popular meal ordered in sit-down restaurants in the US, followed by roast beef, spaghetti, turkey, baked ham and fried shrimp.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p. 172.

California Tourist Destination

The wine district of the Napa Valley has replaced Disneyland as California’s number one tourist destination, with 5.5 million visitors per year.
The Amazing Book of Useless Information #4 p. 204.

Presence on Americas

Recently discovered footprints in volcanic ash of central Mexico’s Valsequillo Basin about 40,000 years ago reveal humans inhabited Americas longer than previously expected. Previous studies suggested human presence in the Western Hemisphere for at least 20,000, but results before 14,000 had been controversial.
Science News Magazine, 7.5.08, p.8.

Tap Water Linked to Diabetes
Arsenic in the IS water supply may be linked to an upswing in cases of type 2 diabetes.
The Week Magazine, 9.5.08, v.8, i.377, p.19.

Highest-Paid US Executives

Oracle Corp CEO Larry Ellison was the highest-paid US executive in 2007, $85 million in cash, stock and perks. Merill Lynch’s John Thain was second with $83 million followed by CBS Corp’s Leslie Moonves at $68 million.-Associated Press
The Week Magazine, 9.5.08, v.8, i.377, p.34.

World’s Most Profitable Bank

Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd earned $9.42 billion in its first half of the year, a 57% rise in profit, becoming the world’s most profitable bank.-Marketwatch.com
The Week Magazine, 9.5.08, v.8, i.377, p.34.