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  • corwin02
    replied
    Let’s muse for a second that a man with a Master’s degree in Special Education who was working with special needs children found a better career in a more sordid field of employment (I am talking about Ron Jeremy).

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  • El Pollo Guerrera
    replied
    The mask that (the character) Michael Myers wore in the original "Halloween" was a William Shatner mask painted white, with the eyeholes made a little wider. They bought it for $1.98.

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  • Jester
    replied
    One last quick note on denonyms...

    You can see from my earlier list that someone from Utah is a Utahn. Odd, but not too weird.

    What you probably didn't know is that someone from Tampa is a Tampon. I know, I know, you're sitting there thinking, "Noooo, it couldn't be...."

    It is.
    Last edited by Jester; 10-08-2013, 04:20 AM.

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  • Teysa
    replied
    The mayor of Talkeetna, Alaska is a cat. Juneau is the only state capital in the U.S. you can't get to by car.

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  • Zellie Crescent
    replied
    Hawaii has it's own time zone, and early concept art showed that the main character Sora of Kingdom Hearts was suposed to be a "Sonic type" lion that had a chainsaw sword instead of being a human with a keyblade.

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  • sms001
    replied
    Quoth SongsOfDragons View Post
    Antikythera Mechanism was a giant orrery, a working not-to-scale model of the solar system....
    Anyone interested in either astronomy or ancient artifacts should check this out, it's crazy cool.

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  • Kit-Ginevra
    replied
    Or are they Lesbosians?

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  • wolfie
    replied
    Regarding demonyms and islands in the Aegean, does this mean it's possible for a man to be a Lesbian?

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  • SongsOfDragons
    replied
    On the subject of demonyms, or 'words that describe where a.person comes from'...

    The technically grammatically correct demonym for Venus is Venereal, not Venusian, which is described as 'awkward'. However since the correct demonym has a meanig which may not be appropriate, astronomers and others who study Venus use the demonym 'Cytherean' which serves just as well, being the Latin translation for the island where Aphrodite came ashore after her birth - Kythera.

    Which is a genuine island in the Aegean, I think, with a little island close by called Antikythera, whose claim to fame was the discovery of a sunken ship containing what appear to be large-scale Ancient Greek computer parts. Current mainstream thought is that the Antikythera Mechanism was a giant orrery, a working not-to-scale model of the solar system. (Or at least it was a few years ago )

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  • Jester
    replied
    It's been brought up in other threads, partly by me and my annoyance at being called an Arizonian, when in fact I'm an Arizonan, but here is a list of what you call people from each state:

    Alabama: Alabamian
    Alaska: Alaskan
    Arizona: Arizonan
    Arkansas: Arkansan
    California: Californian
    Colorado: Coloradan
    Connecticut: Connecticuter
    Delaware: Delawarean
    District of Columbia: Washingtonian
    Florida: Floridian
    Georgia: Georgian
    Hawaii: Hawaiian
    Idaho: Idahoan
    Illinois: Illinoisan
    Indiana: Indianian
    Iowa: Iowan
    Kansas: Kansan
    Kentucky: Kentuckian
    Louisiana: Louisianan
    Maine: Mainer
    Maryland: Marylander
    Massachusetts: Massachusettsan
    Michigan: Michiganian (though I've always heard Michigander, pretty much from people from Michigan.)
    Minnesota: Minnesotan
    Mississippi: Mississippian
    Missouri: Missourian
    Montana: Montanan
    Nebraska: Nebraskan
    Nevada: Nevadan
    New Hampshire: New Hampshirite
    New Jersey: New Jerseyan
    New Mexico: New Mexican
    New York: New Yorker
    North Carolina: North Carolinian
    North Dakota: North Dakotan
    Ohio: Ohioan
    Oklahoma: Oklahoman
    Oregon: Oregonian
    Pennsylvania: Pennsylvanian
    Rhode Island: Rhode Islander
    South Carolina: South Carolinian
    South Dakota: South Dakotan
    Tennessee: Tennessean
    Texas: Texan
    Utah: Utahn
    Vermont: Vermontian
    Virginia: Virginian
    Washington: Washingtonian
    West Virginia: West Virginian
    Wisconsin: Wisconsinite
    Wyoming: Wyomingite

    This list does not include common nicknames, such as Cheesehead, Hoosier, Tar Heel, Mountaineer, Volunteer, or Buckeye. Or less known regional nicknames, such as Zonies from Arizona or Cracker from Florida.

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  • Kit-Ginevra
    replied
    Some slightly out of season music...

    Summer Nights was still No.1 in mid-November 1978 and hung around in the Top 40 over Christmas.

    Meanwhile,in 1985,Do They Know It's Christmas? and Last Christmas were still in the Top 40 at the start of March...

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  • Jester
    replied
    Quoth MoonCat View Post
    In the Western world, the first restaurants were places you went to eat soup, which was considered a "restorative", which led to the name "restaurant."
    The very first restaurant in the world was in France.

    The food was probably great, and the service snooty, even back then.


    The oldest magic trick in the world is The Cups and Balls. If you've ever seen any variation of a routine where the performer made balls appear, disappear, and pass through a set of three cups, that's it!

    The trick is a classic, and has such has been performed for thousands of years. The best practitioner of it that I've ever seen is a magician by the name of Gazzo, who has appeared the world over, performing not only as a street performer extraordinaire, but also with some of the most famous magicians in the world, including (but not limited to) Penn and Teller. I was lucky enough to arrive in Key West when he was still performing at our famous Sunset Celebration at Mallory Square, and over my first several years here, got to witness his act hundreds of times, and actually got to know Gazzo pretty well. This is not a shameless plug for him, as I haven't a clue where he is these days, but I felt it would be remiss of me to mention the oldest trick in magic and not tell about the greatest rendition of it I've ever seen.

    And it would be a bit rude of me to speak so highly of his performance and not share it with you. Gazzo's no longer performing at Mallory Square, but I found a great video of his act there. Yes, it's long. Yes, it's I'm three parts. Yes, it's worth it. Watch all three parts--unless you're easily offended, in which case, you won't want to watch any of it. Because, in addition to is amazing ability as a magician and street performer, Gazzo is known for being very, very obnoxious.

    Part 1. Part 2. Part 3.

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  • fireheart
    replied
    This song was originally banned on radio in every state APART from South Australia. No idea why, although Cold Chisel do have partial origins in Adelaide.

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  • wolfie
    replied
    There are 2 sub-national jurisdictions (state/province/territory/etc.) that border on 4 of the 5 Great Lakes: Ontario, which borders on all but Lake Michigan, and Michigan, which borders on all but Lake Ontario.

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  • fireheart
    replied
    You are actually allowed to transport live stock on Sydney harbour bridge between 12am and 5am, provided that you also give notice. Because of the location however, nobody has invoked this in the last 50 years.

    ETA: To further clarify, this means that you can shepherd them across the bridge
    Last edited by fireheart; 10-02-2013, 09:20 AM.

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