TwistedSifter

14 Random Facts to Sink Your Teeth Into

Do random, interesting make you get all giddy inside because you feel like you’re actually using that brain of yours that’s rattling around inside your head?

Then you’re in luck today, my friends!

Because we have a heaping helping of cool facts that will grab your attention and make you think.

Check them out!

1. This is wild.

Bob the Builder had a fifth finger added to his hands by editors in Japan so viewers there wouldn’t think that the character was a member of the Yakuza, the feared Japanese organized crime group.

Yakuza members “cut off their little fingers as a sign they can be trusted and have strength of character.”

Photo Credit: BBC

2. The kickoff.

College football made its debut on November 6, 1869, in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Rutgers and the College of New Jersey (later renamed Princeton) played in front of an audience of about 100 people and Rutgers won 6-4.

3. Doesn’t sound very comfortable.

Flamingos eat with their heads upside down due to the structure of their beaks.

Flamingos have evolved in such a way that their top beaks act like the bottom beaks of other birds, and vice versa.

4. Say what?!?!

Back in 1996, Google was originally called…wait for it…BackRub.

Cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin picked the name because their program analyzed the Internet’s “back links” to see how important different websites were and if and how it related to other sites.

The name was changed to Google in 1997.

Photo Credit: Google

5. Must have been big.

You’ve probably tried pound cake before, right?

Well, you probably didn’t know that it gets its name from the fact that its original recipe called for one pound each of four ingredients: eggs, flour, butter, and sugar.

Sounds delicious! And filling…

6. On to bigger things.

Everyone has to start somewhere, right?

And for Madonna, that place was a Dunkin’ Donuts in New York City after she moved there in 1978. She was fired for squirting jelly on people and for not taking her job seriously.

I think it’s safe to say she went on to bigger and better things…

7. Poor guy.

Walt Disney was no fan of the popular character Goofy

His biographer Neal Gabler said, Walt always **ted Goofy and he would’ve deep-sixed Goofy a long time ago if the studio didn’t need to make those movies to give ‘make work’ to so many of the animators. Boy, he h**ed Goofy.”

Photo Credit: Disney

8. Monkey buffet!

The annual Monkey Buffet Festival in Thailand sees the residents of Lopburi set out a feast for 3,000 long-tailed macaques.

The festival is a way for local residents to thank the monkeys for attracting tourists and their dollars to the town. Over four tons of fruit, vegetables, and treats are set out for the monkeys to feast on.

Photo Credit: Unsplash,Ioana Mohanu

9. Sorta gross.

Those packages of shredded cheese you buy at the store usually contain cellulose.

What is cellulose?

It’s also called wood pulp or sawdust, and it’s included in the packaging to help the cheese from clumping.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

10. Let’s make a bet.

Dr. Seuss (real name: Theodor Seuss Geisel) wrote his famous book Green Eggs and Ham because his publisher made a bet with him that he couldn’t write a book using only 50 words.

Read it again and you’ll see that he took that bet and he won!

Photo Credit: Amazon

11. The Big…

Before it was universally known as the Big Apple, New York City was briefly called the Big Orange.

The Dutch captured the city from the English in 1673 and called it New Orange to honor William III or Orange.

That didn’t last long, however, and the English took the city back a year later.

12. Yuck!

In the UK, Skittles contained carmine until 2015. Carmine is a red coloring that comes from the crushed abdomens of female beetles.

Are you hungry now…?

13. That doesn’t sound good…

Be careful with those pistachios, my friends…

If raw pistachios are stored together in large quantities, they are known to spontaneously combust because of the chemical reactions that take place when they are ripening.

14. Going the extra mile.

Actress Jennifer Lawrence learned to skin a squirrel for her role in the gritty 2010 film Winter’s Bone.

Lawrence said, “I should say it wasn’t real, for PETA—but screw PETA.”

PETA’s President Ingrid Newkirk said in response, “That was just a throwaway remark, and we have our bet on Jennifer ending up joining the ranks of other young celebrities like Natalie Portman, Lea Michele, and Kellan Lutz who are using their influence to help animals.”

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