While looking for something else, I came cross a book I had
forgotten about…a book I purchased a few years ago—The Book Of Useless Information, an official publication of The
Useless Information Society. It has a
2006 copyright date.
I'm a long time (as well as big time) trivia fan, so I
stopped what I was doing and started randomly flipping through the book. Half an hour later I was still standing in front
of the bookcase thumbing through the pages.
Since I hadn't written today's blog yet, I decided to share
some of this useless information with you.
The contents of the book are broken down into thirteen categories which
I'm going to break up into three blogs, continuing over the next two
weeks. I'll share a few items from each
category.
HALL OF FAME: Thomas Jefferson anonymously submitted design
plans for the White House, they were rejected.
Andrew Jackson was the only president to believe that the world is
flat. James Garfield could write Latin
with one hand and Greek with the other—simultaneously. Gerald Ford was once a male model. Al Capone's business card said he was a used
furniture dealer. Adolph Hitler was Time magazine's Man Of The Year in
1938. The shortest British monarch was
Charles I, who was four-feet nine-inches tall.
When young and impoverished, Pablo Picasso kept warm by burning his own
paintings. Christopher Columbus had
blond hair.
THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT: Tom Hanks is related to Abraham Lincoln. Tommy Lee Jones and Vice President Al Gore
were freshmen roommates at Harvard.
Elizabeth Taylor appeared on the cover of Life magazine more than anyone else. Charlie Chaplin once won third prize in a
Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest. In
high school, Robin Williams was voted the least likely to succeed. Mick Jagger attended the London School of
Economics for two years. Parker Brothers
prints about $50 billion worth of Monopoly money in a year, more than issued
annually by the U.S. Government. Kermit
the Frog is left-handed. Peanuts is the world's most read comic
strip. Mel Blanc, the voice of Bugs
Bunny, was allergic to carrots. Alfred
Hitchcock never won an Academy Award for directing.
THE LITERARY WORLD: During his entire lifetime, Herman Melville's
classic Moby Dick only sold fifty
copies. Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at the age of
nineteen. Tom Sawyer was the first novel written on a typewriter. Arthur Conan Doyle never had Sherlock Holmes
say "Elementary, my dear Watson."
The word cop came from the
English term Constable on Patrol. The most used letter in the English language
is E with Q being the least used. The
oldest word in the English language is town.
The only fifteen letter word that can be spelled without repeating a
letter is uncopyrightable. Bookkeeper is
the only word in the English language with three consecutive double
letters. In England in the 1880s, pants
was considered a dirty word. Polish is
the only word in the English language that, when capitalized, is changed from a
noun or a verb to a nationality.
ON THE MENU: On average, there are 178 sesame seeds on
each McDonald's Big Mac bun. Coca-Cola
was originally green. A full seven
percent of the Irish barley crop goes to the production of Guinness beer. The first man to distill bourbon whiskey was
a Baptist preacher in 1789. Almonds are
a member of the peach family. You use
more calories eating celery than there are in celery itself. The oldest known vegetable is the pea. Tomatoes and cucumbers are fruits. There is no such thing as blue food, even
blueberries are purple. The only food
that does not spoil is honey.
This is only a small sampling of the first four sections of
the book. Anyone have any interesting
trivia bits that fall within these four categories?
Next week I'll continue with some samples from the second
group of four sections. And the week
after that I'll do the final five sections.
2 comments:
I love this. I always say my head is filled with useless pieces of trivia. I'll have to get that book. Thanks for an entertaining blog. I have to agree about the letter "e." My "e" on my computer is completely wiped out.
Hi, Cara. Glad you enjoyed it. Two more blogs from this book for the next two weeks.
Thanks for your comment.
Post a Comment