Strange Facts About Bizarre Occurrences


If you require some amazing pieces of trivia to keep in your back pocket for those long silences on Tinder dates, look no further. Memorize some of these unlikely gems and reveal your intellectual, well-rounded knowledge base to those admiring friends around you. Enjoy!


Bizarre Occurrences Facts

26. Billy Possum Picnic

Many people don’t know that the origin of the classic teddy bear toy that many of us have grown up cuddling and squishing was inspired by President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt. But there's an even weirder twist to the story: The next President, William H. Taft, assumed that since Roosevelt had left office, demand for the bears would go down and a stuffed animal to represent him should go into production. Thus “Billy the Possum” was born, a fuzzy little marsupial. The idea tanked, and the whole idea was swept under the rug in less than a year.

 Wikimedia Commons

25. Green Eggs and Ham

Popular children’s books author Dr. Seuss made a bet with his editor that he could finish a book using only 50 words—or less. His big hit Cat in the Hat, for comparison’s sake, was composed of 225 different words. Cut to the completion of Green Eggs and Ham; exactly 50 words were used in the text.

 Pixy

 

24. Heavy, Man

The heaviest avocado on record was found by Hawaiian resident Pamela Wang in 2017. The beautiful green plant weighed in at 5 lbs 3.6 oz, or 2.37 kg—which might be just enough to serve a table of avo-thirsty Millennials at lunch.

 Shutterstock

23. They Grow up So Fast

Fairly soon after birth, baby sharks swim away from their mother and instantly begin an independent life. They don’t require a period of nurturing or feeding; they are capable of hunting and defending themselves from the beginning and learn more as they go.

 Pixabay

22. Quoth the Raven

When ravens are kept in captivity, they develop speech skills that are sometimes comparably better than a parrot’s—and they also learn to mimic sounds and other animal’s calls.

 Pixabay

21. To the Left, to the Left

Left-handed people make up about 10% of the human population, a relatively small percentage that leads to the industrialized world being designed for the right-handed population. However, this percentage is totally flipped when it comes to Muppets! Because most puppeteers are right-handed, they use their more dexterous right hand to operate the Muppet’s head, and their left hand to work the Muppet’s hands.

 Getty Images

20. It’s all About the Handiwork

It’s likely that when someone gushes about their crush’s accent, they’re referring to a lovely London lilt or a slow Texan drawl, amongst many other unique accents. However, did you know that someone can have an accent without saying a word? If an individual grows up learning one kind of sign language and then later learns another, their signing may take on a particular "accent."

 Shutterstock

19. Treehuggers Beware

Trees produce oxygen for us all, and provide a sense of tranquility and escape from modern life. An exception to this, however, is the Manchineel Tree, or “Tree of Death.” This tree can burn your skin off, its fruit can poison you, and if you burn the bark, you may go blind.

 Flickr, Aylwin Lo

18. Excuse Us, Gentlemen

While there are dozens—even hundreds—of films about US Presidents, their achievements, and their families, one of the greatest White House stories is shockingly little-known to the general public. While Franklin D. Roosevelt was in office, he and his wife Eleanor (who is often voted as one of the most influential figures of the 20th century) hosted an event where the guest list included iconic aviator Amelia Earhart. These two ground-breaking women slipped out of the White House, found and seized a small airplane, and flew to Baltimore together. Who wouldn’t want to see that on the big screen?

 Wikimedia Commons

17. Brain Food

Touching a human brain is not an experience many can claim to have, but those in the medical/scientific community have revealed that it has a firm, springy texture that they compare to tofu.

 Shutterstock

16. Big Chocolate Surprise

Everyone has a different way of eating a Kit-Kat, whether it’s sucking off all of the chocolate to get to the wafer or chowing down without breaking the bar into 4 pieces. The next time you indulge, take a look at the chocolatey wafer filling—and experience the revelation that the filling is just composed of crushed-up Kit-Kats! The Kit-Kats that are damaged in the factory are thrown into a different area and repurposed to get that delicious filling.

 Wikimedia Commons, Famartin

15. The Bard Never Went Out of Style

If William Shakespeare returned from the dead, he’d get a pleasant surprise in witnessing how many of the words he invented are still in common use. He gave us "lonely," "torture," "swag" (at least through his invention of "swagger"), and the "gossip" in Gossip Girl, among many others (you have to admit that it’s catchier than "Juicy Conversations Girl"). Still haven't forgiven him for "swag," though.

 Shutterstock

14. The Silent Menace in Lobbies and Offices

What scares humans the most about death is all the dramatic and torturous ways that it could happen—a plane crash, a terrorist’s bomb, a shark attack—to themselves or to their loved ones. However, it’s more likely that something mundane will do the job, like a machine full of chips. According to research, you are two times more likely to get crushed by a vending machine than to be attacked by a shark.

 Wallpaper flare

13. May the Force be With Your Head

“Off with their head!” is a cry associated with olden days of more simplistic and brutal modes of punishment, and in particular with the French invention of the guillotine, a device that held a person by the neck until a blade slid down to sever their head. As archaic as this sounds, France was still using guillotines until 1977—the same year Star Wars came out.

 Shutterstock

12. A Clever Ruse (and Fashion Statement)

When the United States outlawed alcohol under Prohibition in the 1920s, many "entrepreneurs" sprang up who aimed to fill the demand for booze with their own homemade or smuggled liquor. With intense police surveillance, some of these bootleggers wore "cow shoes" to throw the law off their trail. With carved toes and heels, the shoes left a print of a hoof instead of a footprint, baffling the police and letting the flow of forbidden booze continue.

 Wikimedia Commons

11. A Kingdom United by Wet Beards

Pub culture is one of the defining elements of life in the United Kingdom; everyone has their "local" and people of all ages over 16 can be found chatting over a pint. However, researchers from Guinness have recently unearthed some data that beer-lovers will find, ahem, dispiriting. Apparently upwards of 93,000 litres of UK beer are lost per year in beards and other facial hair. Pick up a razor and save the ale!

 Shutterstock

10. A Nod to Texan History

When it comes to theme parks, Six Flags has a reputation for being one of the biggest and the best. What exactly is the meaning of the six flags that the company’s name references, though? Apparently, it goes back to the first theme park the company built in Texas. At various points through the state’s history, six different countries have occupied Texas: Spain, Mexico, France, the Republic of Texas, the Confederacy, and the United States. Apparently one can mess with Texas sometimes.

 Wikimedia Commons

 

9. A Book-Hoarder’s Excuse

Are you one of those people who can’t resist bringing home armloads of newspapers and magazines, big bags of just-released novels and boxed sets of biographies, and then just let them sit and collect dust? Instead of rambling defensively to your roommates that you fully intend to read your piles of books and out of date magazines, just simply state that you’re practicing Tsundoko—a Japanese word describing the act of acquiring books and not reading them.

 Wikimedia Commons

8. Did You Get the Memo?

In 2007, Google sent an urgent email to employees informing them that there was a python snake loose on the company's NYC premises. There actually was a python prowling around, but because the email went out on April Fool’s Day, not everyone took the warning seriously.

 Pixabay

7. Just One More Glass

Feeling guilty about your drinking habits? Gloat over the fact that Vatican City consumes more wine than any other country in the world per person. Each citizen of this teeny-tiny independent state consumes an average of 74 liters of wine per year. It’s currently unknown how much of this wine is being consumed in communion or other religious rituals. But surely not all of it, right?

 PickPik

6. Russian Olympic Problems

Russian athletes have faced many issues in the past few years when it comes to competing in the Olympics, from accusations of doping to political wariness about the country’s government. Most embarrassing perhaps of all was the 1908 Olympics in London, when the Russian team showed up a tad late for the games—12 days to be exact. The reason? Russia was going by a Julian calendar, which is 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar—the latter being the accepted civil calendar in 1908.

 Wikimedia Commons

5. A Whole New World of Bathroom Cinema

Ever since filmmaking was invented and popularized, filmmakers have been pushing boundaries for what can be shown on screen. In 2018 this relates to more to nudity and revisionist portrayals of problematic historical figures, but in the earlier days of Hollywood, movies had to abide by a very strict code of decency for even the most mundane human activities. Psycho, perhaps Alfred Hitchcock’s most famous film, came out in 1960 and was the very first American film to show a toilet being flushed. The Swinging Sixties, indeed!

 Psycho (1960), Paramount Pictures

4. Not so E-asy

The French author Georges Perec managed to write an entire novel (called La Disparition) without once using the letter E. The novel was later translated into English, but translators couldn’t keep the translated title of The Disappearance because it contained two letter e’s. Instead, it was named A Void.

 Shutterstock

3. Dead in the Saddle

Some athletes complain that they’re dead on their feet after a big race, but jockey Fred Hayes takes the cake in that category. In 1923, Hayes was competing in a race through Belmont Park in New York when he suddenly had a massive heart attack and died only halfway through the race. His horse, however, powered through and carried the rider to the finish line first—making Hayes the only man to win a horse race while dead.

 Pixabay

2. Horton Hears a "WTF?"

Who doesn't love Dr. Seuss? He's even appeared on this list! Yet this beloved children's author has something of  a dark past: while Theodor Geisel's wife Helen was ill with cancer, he carried on an affair with another woman. Helen ended up committing suicide in 1967, whereupon Geisel then married his lover less than a year later. Oof. Childhood ruined.

 Getty Images

1. Tickled Pink

Moscow's palaces during the time of the Tsars were imposing, hallowed places. They were also, truth be told, kind of kinky. The Russian rulers reportedly developed something of a foot fetish—to be precise, a foot tickling fetish. Female rulers like Catherine the Great and Anna Ivanovna were so sexually aroused by this play, they often employed full-time foot ticklers to satisfy their cravings.

 PxHere

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