Stuff I've Googled, what I Googled a few minutes ago, what I'm Googling now, why I'm Googling, and other fascinating information.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

What is a jalopy?


Search
: jalopie; jalopy origin

Why: On the SNL sketch "New Car Horns (by Tina Tina)," the old-timey horns goes, "Aawoooga, jalopy. What?"
Answer: It's just an old-ass car! Theories of origin:
  • from the Yiddish word shlappe, a term for an old horse (actually Polish)
  • from the French word chaloupe, a kind of skiff - which is a boat, not a car
  • from the Italian-American pronunciation of "jelly apple" - the jell-oppy, "one of the decrepit old carts from which Italian immigrants sold this delicacy during the early part of the 20th century..."
  • from Spanish galapago, i.e. one of those big slow tortoises (galapago means "saddle," btw)
And this:
A theory is that it is derived from a non-Spanish pronunciation of Jalapa, Mexico. It seems that, during the 1920s, many decrepit automobiles were shipped from New Orleans to scrapyards in Jalapa. The theory is that some of the dockhands or crew members who did not speak English began naming these broken-down autos after their destination, and the name eventually morphed into our current jalopy.
Other words for shitty cars: flivver (1910), heap, tin lizzy (1915), crate (1927), bucket, beater, hooptie (1990), and clunker (2009).

Source: Historical Origins of English Words and Phrases, Answerbag

The More You Know: Doorbells and More. Ding dong! Router! Netflix! What?

Saturday, February 27, 2010

What is Hasenpfeffer Incorporated?


Search
: laverne shirley incorporated

Why: Terry O'Quinn wants to work with Ben Emerson after "LOST," maybe in a show about suburban hit men, or make my dreams come true with a "Laverne & Shirley"-type deal.
Answer: Ehh wtf, it's nothing. Hasenpfeffer is German rabbit stew:
Hase is German for "rabbit," Pfeffer is German for "pepper," though in this case, it refers to the small pieces of meat. The dish is prepared from smaller parts of a rabbit which are not suitable for roasting. These are braised with onions and wine, and the marinade is thickened with the animal's blood.
Source: Wikipedia

The More You Know: And the Yiddish:
  • Schlemiel: an inept clumsy person; a bungler; a dolt (Yiddish shlemil)
  • Schlimazel: a chronically unlucky person (שלימזל shlimazl, from slim, "crooked" + Hebrew מזל mazel, "luck")

Friday, February 26, 2010

What is the origin of the word "idiot"?


Search
: idiot origin

Why
: Some idiot marine dropped a grenade on the freeway in Orange County.

Answer: It comes from the Greeks!
Idiot originates from the Greek word ἰδιώτης, idiōtēs (idiotes), which refers to a person disinterested in participating in democracy and public life. These people were viewed as selfish, contemptible and stupid as they were more concerned with their daily personal affairs than they were of the good of the society.
Well, maybe. Others say the Greek word meant "person lacking professional skill," "a private citizen," "individual," coming from ἴδιος, idios, "private," "one's own."

Later in the Middle Ages, the word took on additional connotations associated with being stupid, such as being mentally incapable.

Source: Online Cortex, Yahoo! Answers

The More You Know: The word moron was originally a scientific term, coined around 1912 by psychologist Henry Goddard from a Greek word meaning "dull" or "foolish." It was used on the English version of the "Binet Scale" of human intelligence, the basis of today's IQ test. The Binet Scale went approximately as follows:
  • Normal - 85-115
  • Deficient - 71-84
  • Moron - 51-70
  • Imbecile - 26-50
  • Idiot - 0-25

Thursday, February 25, 2010

What's the vitamin C distribution in an orange?


Search
: where is the vitamin c in an orange peel

Why: Ariana has a tickle in her throat, like what I had 9 days ago before the tuberculosis set in. Her mom says the most vitamin C is in the peel and the white stuff, which tastes disgusting.

Answer: She is right! It breaks down like this:
  • 53% - peel
  • 26% - juice
  • 21% - pulp and pith
While the orange peel tastes bitter and gross, you can zest it, and it is sometimes broken down to be used in animal feed.

Source: UltimateCitrus.com

The More You Know: While I was doing this, this happened:
In case you are interested:

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

What does "beck" mean?


Search
: beck and call

Why: At her bitchiest (she is always so mean to him because she thinks she's better than him - which she's not, BTW), Rachel tells Ross she wants him at her "constant beck and call."

Answer: According to Merriam-Webster:
A 'beck' is a silent signal, such as a nod of the head or a motion with the forefinger. The sense is apparent in the Earl of Worcester's Iulius Cesars Commentaryes (1470): 'It should be ready at a beck.' In summoning a servant one might have to resort to a 'call' as well as a 'beck' if the servant did not see the beck or failed to respond to it."
Source: Phrases.org.uk

The More You Know: Other Becks:

How do nasal sprays work?


Search
: how does nasal sprays work

Why: I have been sick for upwards of a week. At first it was just a chesty cough, but during my ski vacation this past weekend, it went up into my sinuses, face, ears, and head. I have some Walgreens brand generic nostril spray that seems to help.

Answer: Decongestant sprays (like the one I have) constrict blood vessels in the lining of your nose! This decreases swelling. But! The thing is! that after 3 days, your nosey gets used to them. Then, not only does the spray stop doing what it's supposed to do, but your nose vessels start swelling like crazy, even worse than before. So don't do it for more than 3 days!
Source: AnswerBag, WebMD

The More You Know: The other kind of nasal spray is just saline, and you can use it all you want. It moisturizes to prevent crustiness, loosen mucus, and relieve congestion. Maybe I need some of that (in addition to my 3-times-a-day decongestant cocktail).

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

What is the origin of the term "widow's peak"?


Search
: widows peak

Why: In Beat the Reaper, Magdalena has one.

Answer: Two possibilities:
  • As people get older, their hairlines often recede. This makes a widow's peak more prominent - or the appearance of a widow's peak on a person who does not actually have one. A woman with a widow's peak has lived long enough to outlive her husband.
  • A 1500s-style mourning cap or Mary Stuart cap features a triangular piece of cloth on the forehead that resembles a widow's peak.
Source: WiseGeek

The More You Know: On a man, it's called a widower's peak.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Who sings the song in that Volvo commercial?


Search
: "oh boy you make me feel like

Why: I just saw it omg!

Answer: Miss Li! The song is called "Oh Boy":
Source: Lyrics Mania

The More You Know: Miss Li also sings the song in the iPod Nano commercial, "Bourgeois Shangri-La."

What is the origin of the word "kismet"?


Search
: kismet etym

Why: In the Vanity Fair feature "Sweet Bard of Youth" about John Hughes:
Ringwald and Hughes simply talked—Hughes confirming his hunch that she was the right girl to play Samantha, Ringwald bowled over by his interest and believing it Kismet that they shared a birthday, February 18.
It's capitalized, see? Weird.

Answer: It's Turkish! It means "fate," which you know. It comes from the Arabic word qismat or qismah, "portion or lot." This comes from qasama, "he divided."

In short, who knows why they capitalized it. Vanity Fair is not known for being 100% norms.

Source: A Measured Response from the Man who Unscrews the Inscrutable, EtymOnline

The More You Know: Kismet™ is also the brand name for a dice game extremely similar to Yahtzee™, which happens to be my favorite game on earth. And it's the name of Joel's damn dog.

Did Nietzsche's sister really found a white supremacist cult?


Search
: nietzsche

Why: In Beat the Reaper by Josh Bazell (which I bought last night at Hudson News and is really great, btw):
Apparently we've used up every nurse in the Caribbean, the Philippines, and Southeast Asia, and now we're most of the way through Eastern Europe. When the white supremacist cult Nietzsche's sister founded in Paraguay reemerges from the jungle, at least its members will be able to find work.
Answer: Yes! In February 1887 - 16 years after the War against the Triple Alliance - Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche and her fanatic anti-semitic husband Bernhard Förster persuaded 14 mostly impoverished German families to move with them to the Paraguayan rainforest to start Nueva Germania, a "pure" Aryan colony. The initiative was a failure due to the harness of the wild environment, and Förster committed suicide there in 1889. Elisabeth left in 1893.

The colonials that remained soon had forgotten the original Aryan ideals of its founders and ended up completely integrating to the Paraguayan culture. Dr. Mengele spent some time in Nueva Germania while on the run after WWII.

Today, Nueva Germania is a quiet community of San Pedro dedicated to agriculture, specializing in the cultivation of yerba mate.

Source: Wikipedia

The More You Know: Don't worry - Nietzsche wasn't a Jew-hater. In fact, he:
  • Broke with his editor, Ernst Schmeitzner, disgusted by his anti-Semitic opinions. Nietzsche saw his own writings as "completely buried and unexhumeable in this anti-Semitic dump" of Schmeitzner—associating the editor with a movement that should be "utterly rejected with cold contempt by every sensible mind."
  • Criticized and mocked his sister and Bernhard for their plans for Nueva Germania. (He wrote to her, "I am now in a position of emergency defense against your spouse's Party. These accursed anti-Semite deformities shall not sully my ideal!!'')
  • Wrote several criticisms of both anti-semitism and German nationalism, in Beyond Good and Evil, Ecce Homo, and The Gay Science.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

What is the origin of the word "zaftig"?


Search
: zaftig origin

Why: Kat is trying to think of a way to describe the fat teller who conducted her transaction and apparently lost the checks she deposited.

Answer: Well it's Yiddish, doy, but Yiddish is a mixture of other languages. In this case, the word zaftik, Yiddish for "juicy," comes from the High German word saft, "juice."

If you are ever in Brookline, Mass., maybe going to see the birthplace of President John F. Kennedy, go eat at Zaftigs Jewish deli in Coolidge Corner.
Source: Moot

The More You Know: It's Katrina's birthday.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

What's the song in the trailer for "The Good Guy"?


Search
: song good guy trailer

Why: It came on my Teevee.

Answer: "Just Impolite" by PlushGun, a band from Brooklyn! Here is a vid with lyrics!
Source: Yahoo! Answers

The More You Know: That part goes:
Cause I like you
Maybe I'm just like
Holding on to something that we
Know we can not hold or fold
It seems we just can't forget

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

What is the origin of the term "pell-mell"?


Search
: pell mell

Why: In response to this picture of the Loch Ness monster:
Katrina said:
Arthur Grant probably scared the bajeebus out of the poor thing! Can you imagine being out for a relaxing stroll around the lake and having that guy ride at you all pell mell?? No wonder he doesn't come out of the water anymore [sad5]
Answer: It's French!
  • French pêle-mêle , from Old French pesle mesle
  • Probably reduplication of mesle, "to mix"
Now the term means:
  1. In a jumbled, confused manner; helter-skelter
  2. In frantic disorderly haste; headlong
Source: The Free Dictionary

The More You Know: That Arthur Grant was a veterinary student, but maybe he turned into Arthur Grant, cinematographer, who loved the fantastic and shot such creepy classics as:
  • Shadow of the Cat (1961)
  • The Curse of the Werewolf (1961)
  • The Phantom of the Opera (1962)
  • The Plague of the Zombies (1966)
  • The Devil Rides Out (1968)
  • Demons of the Mind in 1972
Oh, PS, did you know Andrew Lloyd Webber has a sequel to Phantom - called Love Never Dies - opening next month? Believe it!

Where did the Lucky Cat come from?


Search
: lucky cat history

Why: The Chinese New Year was Feb. 14. Farmville let me put this thing in my yard (even though it is Japanese):
(My farm is also done up real nice for Mardi Gras.)

Robin and Gibson both have tattoos of that kitty.

Answer
: First, its official name is Maneki Neko ("Beckoning Cat"), and it's also called Welcoming Cat, Money Cat, and Fortune Cat. You often see ceramic sculptures near the entrances of shops and restaurants, beckoning you to come in and give the owners some money.

One story of origin about a priest and a samurai:
In the 17th century, there was a dilapidated temple in the west of Tokyo. The old priest kept a cat called Tama, and he often muttered and complained to Tama about his poverty. In spite of this, the old priest always shared what little food he had with the cat, until one day there wasn't a scrap of food to be had. Worn down by years of near starvation, the priest shouted at his cat. "Tama, I have always fed you despite not having enough to eat myself. Couldn't you do something for this temple?" The cat got up and wandered out of the temple.

It so happened that Naotaka Ii, the Samurai lord of the district, was out riding near the temple. It had started to rain heavily. Naotaka Ii took shelter under a large tree when he noticed Tama in front of the temple. The cat appeared to be beckoning him. "What would a cat want with a Samurai?" he thought and left the shelter of the tree and walked towards the cat. As he did so, lightning brought the tree crashing down. The beckoning cat had saved his life.

Scooping up Tama, the Samurai rushed into the temple. "Who owns this lucky cat?" he bellowed. "Tama is my companion, my lord," answered the old priest. In gratitude for the cat saving his life, the Samurai made the temple his family temple, and it went from being dilapidated to a temple of splendor. Tama lived in luxury for the rest of his life, and when he finally died, he was buried with great ceremony. It is said that Maneki Neko was created in honor of Tama.

How darling.
Another story, this time about a courtesan:

In the 18th century, in a house in Yosiwara, was a courtesan by the name of Usugumo. She was very popular and also a lover of cats. She kept her favorite cat by her side at all times. One night, as Usugumo was preparing to meet her guests, her cat began tugging violently at her kimono. Whatever she did, the courtesan could not stop the cat from pulling at her gown.

Becoming afraid, Usugumo cried out for help. The Madam of the house came rushing in and, believing the cat to be possessed by an evil spirit, cut off its head with a sword. The head flew up to the ceiling, where it bit and killed a large snake that had been poised to strike Usugumo.

The courtesan fell into deep mourning over the loss of the loyal and brave cat. To try to console her, one of her guests carve a likeness of the cat from aromatic wood. This carving became known as Maneki Neko - the beckoning cat.

Source: Best Cat Art, Wikipedia

The More You Know: Other stuff about the kitties:
  • It is beckoning, not waving. That's how Japanese people beckon.
  • If the left paw is raised, it brings in customers.
  • If the right paw is raised, it brings in wealth and luck.
  • White cats (the most popular) represent purity and attract positive things.
  • Red cats attract love, marriage, and personal happiness.
  • Black cats ward off evil spirits and stalkers.
  • Green cats bring in good health or knowledge and academic success.
  • Most hold a gold coin, a koban, worth something like $1,000.
  • A large fish symbolizes abundance and good fortune.
  • A mallet symbolizes good fortune.
  • Most wear a red collar, bell, and bib, which were worn by cats in prosperous homes in the Tokugawa period. The bell helped the owners keep track of the cats.

What is the song in the Laughing Cow commercial?


Search
: "whatever you do don't stop" lyrics laughing cow

Why: It's catchy. Catchy.

Answer: It's called "Don't Stop" by Patrick and Eugene! In all its wacky glory:
Source: Allthelyrics.com

The More You Know: You know what's good? The garlic & herb flavor of Laughing Cow. I eat it with Pringles Stix, pizza flavor. Snack of champions:

Monday, February 15, 2010

What is emery?


Search
: emery

Why: An article I am editing talks about an "emery cloth," and, y'know, emery boards exist.

Answer: It's a really hard rock! It's a mixture of minerals, including corundum, which - I think we all remember from last March - is the fancy science name for rubies and sapphires. Crushed or naturally eroded emery (known as black sand) is used as an abrasive and as a traction enhancer in asphalt and tarmac mixtures. It is mostly mined from the Greek island of Naxos.
Source: Wikipedia

The More You Know: The Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness characterizes the scratch resistance of various minerals through the ability of a harder material to scratch a softer material. It's based on 10 minerals that are readily available:
  1. Talc (Absolute Hardness 1)
  2. Gypsum (3)
  3. Calcite (9)
  4. Fluorite (21)
  5. Apatite (48)
  6. Orthoclase Feldspar (72)
  7. Quartz (100)
  8. Topaz (200)
  9. Corundum (400)
  10. Diamond (1800)
So: if some material is scratched by apatite but not by fluorite, its hardness on the Mohs scale would fall between 4 and 5. Since emery can be a mix of minerals, there is no assigned Mohs hardness. The hardness of corundum is 9 and that of some present spinel-group minerals is near 8, but the hardness of others, such as magnetite, is near 6.

Other interesting hardnesses:
  • Pencil "lead" (graphite) - 1
  • Fingernail - 2.2-2.5
  • Copper penny - 3.2-3.5
  • Pocketknife - 5.1
  • Knife blade - 5.5
  • Window glass plate - 5.5
  • Steel file - 6.5
  • Unglazed porcelain - 7
  • Cubic zirconia - 8

What does "dollars to doughnuts" mean?


Search
: dollars to donuts

Why: Bruce Campbell said it on "Burn Notice." (I actually watch that show.)
Answer: It means "most certainly." It comes from the idea of an outrageous bet:
Betting a dollar to a half-dollar, for instance, means that you're giving 2 to 1 odds--you're willing to risk a dollar to win only a half-dollar. Being willing to bet dollars against doughnuts (viewed as worthless) means that you're totally confident that you're right, so confident that you'll bet money against nothing.
Hey, isn't a donut actually worth a dollar? Some kinds must be. Some way more that.
The first explicit reference to betting is not found until the 1920s, in a story by "Ellery Queen"--"I'll bet dollars to doughnuts Field played the stock market or the horses."
Back then, a donut was probably worth, like, tuppence.

Source: The Mavens' Word of the Day

The More You Know: The expression is also found in a number of variants with objects considered worthless:
  • Dollars to buttons
  • Dollars to dumplings
  • Dollars to cobwebs
  • Dollars to a stack of Congo DVDs

How is rubber made?


Search
: how is rubber made

Why: In The Darling, they talk about a lot of rubber trees in Monrovia.

Answer: I'm just gonna copy and paste this, "Rubber from trees":

Natural rubber is made from the sap of the wild rubber tree. The bark of the tree is 'tapped', this means cutting small slits into the bark, so that the white sap, known as latex, drips out and is caught in collecting cups.

In the past, an acid was added to the latex to make the sap set like a jelly. The latex jelly was then flattened and rolled into sheets and hung out to dry by workers.

A way of making rubber stronger and more elastic was invented by and Charles Goodyear in 1839. His method was called vulcanising and it stopped rubber from perishing.

Liquid latex is now shipped to factories where the rubber is made by machines. It can be cloured and made into car tyres, gloves, hoses, balloons and many other things.

For some good pics of the Rubber Tapping Process, click here.

Source
: KidCyber, Sarawak Rubber Tapper

The More You Know: Rubber trees are native to tropical parts of South America. Until the 1870s, most rubber came from Brazil. Then Sir Henry Wickham took some seeds to England and grew seedlings. These were later moved into plantations in parts of Southeast Asia.

Rubber can also be made from chemicals found in petroleum. This is called synthetic rubber, obvi.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

What does "wiki" even mean?


Search
: wiki

Why: What?

Answer: It's a Hawaiian word for "fast." Some use the backronym "what I know is." Sneer.

Ward Cunningham, the developer of the first wiki software, WikiWikiWeb, originally described it as "the simplest online database that could possibly work."

Source: Wikipedia

The More You Know: Wikipedia was launched Jan. 15, 2001. What does it want you to learn about today? Click here to find out!

Why do lizards do push-ups?


Search
: why do lizards do push ups

Why: Saw a little guy by the pool today. Called him Artie after Slater's pal who died. He was doing push-ups like this:

Answer: Several reasons!
  • To display how strong their teeny adorable muscles are
  • To tell other lizards to GTFO
  • To say, "Hey, human: I see you, and you better not try anything!"
One researcher said:
As in humans, if an anole can do many of these push-ups, it shows that he is in prime physical condition. These displays of strength help avert actual physical confrontations between male lizards, which can be very fierce and destructive.
Source: LiveScience

The More You Know: A lot of lizards do this at dawn and dusk to mark their territories. Many other animals - from birds to primates - put on territorial displays at these times, but theirs are all noisy. Lizards are the only ones who perform for the eyes.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

What is the origin of the word "paparazzi"?


Search
: paparazzi

Why: I have had that Lady Gaga song in my head for several hours. I know the word comes from La Dolce Vita, but I haven't seen that film in several years and wouldn't pick up on the nuances of Italian, anyway.

Answer: First, "paparazzi" sounds real similar to pappataci or papataceo, which is a Sicilian word for a big mosquito - buzzing, hovering, annoying, parasitic. Fellini drew this picture of the character Paparazzo, a news photographer:
Disputed stories of origin:
  • In his school days, Fellini remembered a boy who was nicknamed "Paparazzo" (Mosquito), because of his fast talking and consonant blurs. He gave this name to his photographer.
  • The name came from a southern Italy travel narrative, "By the Ionian Sea," published in 1901. The book gives the name of a hotel proprietor, Signor Paparazzo. Fellini opened the book at random, saw the name, and decided to use it for the photographer.
Source: Paparazzi Mania, Wikipedia

The More You Know: Some classic paparazzi shots. Tazio Secchiaroli is considered "the original paparazzo," and he founded Roma Press Photos in 1955. Ron Galella was obsessed with Jackie O. and ordered to stay 25 yards away from her, but he took the shot below from inside a taxi.

Mickey Hargitay, 1962:
Jackie O., 1971, Ron Galella:
John Travolta, 1971, Ron Galella:
David Bowie, Art Garfunkel, Paul Simon, Yoko Ono, John Lennon, Grammys 1975, Ron Galella:

Sean Penn, 1986, Ron Galella:

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Who sings a song that goes "You are my loveline"?


Search
: "you are my loveline" lyrics

Why: I heard it on NPR this morning. It reminded me of something.

Answer: Hot Chip! It is called "Hand Me Down Your Love" from their new album One Life Stand, which was released on Feb 1. That song is only on their MySpace, but here is the title track, which I think sounds pretty good:
I'm not sure what it is reminding me of, but maybe something by Gorky's Zygotic Mynci. Maybe "Christina."
Source: The Scotsman

The More You Know: That video is weird, but the Parlophone YouTube channel has some other neat stuff, like videos from Jonsi Birgisson's imminent solo album, a million things by Pet Shop Boys, and this "trailer" for the Gorillaz' upcoming Plastic Beach, which looks like Avatar + The Life Aquatic:

I want to see a picture of Colton Harris-Moore


Search
: colton harris moore

Why: Katie posted this link about the teenage "barefoot burglar," who has been stealing things and leaving hilarious calling cards in and around the San Juan Islands north of Seattle. Highlights:
  • Surveillance video of some burglaries showed the culprit barefoot — hence the moniker. He's robbed a grocery store, hardware store, bar, coffee-shop, and bank.
  • Last fall, a Cessna was stolen from a rural airport in Idaho and crash-landed near Granite Falls, WA. In the airport hangar in Idaho, the plane's owner found actual, rather than chalk, bare footprints, including some on a wall. The culprit had apparently put his feet up while eating.
  • Someone broke into a deli on Orcas Island Wednesday night, and its owner arrived Thursday to find large chalk-outline feet drawn all over the floor. Two of the footprints were leading out the door, next to a chalk-scrawled message: "C-YA!"
Answer: Here he is. He's 18:

Source: Google Images

The More You Know: Jesse James-style folk hero or good for nothing scoundrel? Follow his exploits with the Colton Harris Moore Fan Club.

Why do people say "Jesus H. Christ"?


Search
: jesus h christ origin

Why:
Answer: First, it dates back to at least the late 19th century, though according to Mark Twain, it was already old in 1850. Theories:
  • "Our Father, who art in Heaven, Harold be Thy name."
  • The Greek name for Jesus is Ιησούς, and the first 3 letters are transliterated as IHS, IHC, JHS or JHC.
  • IHS gave rise to the backronym Iesus Hominum Salvator (Latin for "Jesus, savior of men"), so it is plausible that JHC similarly led to Jesus Harold Christ.
  • Before an important battle in 312, Emperor Constantine saw vision of the cross in the sky and heard a voice saying that he would conquer "in this sign," in Latin in hoc signo, i.e. IHS.
And this:
The earliest writer to speculate on the initials of Jesus is the author of the 2nd century "Epistle of Barnabas" (9:6-7). ..."Learn therefore, children of love, concerning all things abundantly, that Abraham, who first appointed circumcision, looked forward in the spirit unto Jesus, when he circumcised having received the ordinances of three letters. For the scripture saith; And Abraham circumcised of his household eighteen males and three hundred. What then was the knowledge given unto him? Understand ye that He saith the eighteen first, and then after an interval three hundred. In the eighteen 'I' stands for ten, 'H' for eight. Here thou hast JESUS (IHSOYS). And because the cross in the 'T' was to have grace, He saith also three hundred. So He revealeth Jesus in the two letters, and in the remaining one the cross."
Source: ChristianOrigins.com, Wikipedia

The More You Know:

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

I want to see the real Pauline Parker and Juliet Hulme


Search
: pauline parker; juliet hulme

Why: They are real people about whom Heavenly Creatures is based. The 15 year-olds had an infatuous friendship in New Zealand in the 1950s and teamed up to [spoiler alert] murder Parker's mother in 1954.

Answer: Here they are together. In the movie, they are played by Melanie Lynskey (Up in the Air, "Two and a Half Men," Ever After [one of the stepsisters]) and Kate Winslet in her first movie ever.
Source: Google Images

The More You Know: After the 1954 murder, the girls served separate 5-year prison sentences and, on their release, established new lives. Pauline Parker lives under the alias Hilary Nathan and runs a riding school for children.

In 1994, it was discovered that popular crime novelist Anne Perry was the real Juliet Hulme. She published her first book in 1979 and has written over 50 since then.

What is a "borstal"?


Search
: borstal

Why: In Heavenly Creatures, Pauline says:
I have made no decision yet, as the last fate I wish to meet is one in a borstal.
Answer: A prison for delinquent British youths! This system was meant to separate juveniles from older convicts and designed to be "educational rather than punitive." The first was established in Borstal, Kent, in 1902. Here's an interesting article about one.

The Criminal Justice Act 1982 abolished the borstal system in the UK, introducing youth custody centers instead.

Source: Google Dictionary (which I don't like, by the way - why did they change it?)

The More You Know: There are a book, a film (2000), and a play called Borstal Boy, about an Irish boy who - during his 3 years in the prison during WWII - learns to love his enemies and becomes a man! The play won a Tony Award in 1970.
There's also what appears to be a gay porn by that name. NSFW.

I want to watch "Bear City" on SNL


Search
: bear city snl hulu; bear city intro

Why: Joel at 2PzNaPpod posted this video of a 3-legged bear walking upright in the woods!!! And it has a baby!!
Answer: Here is the intro, which is what I mainly wanted to watch. Do you hear Fred Willard?
Source: VIRB

The More You Know: That bear is bowlegged. Have you ever noticed how bowlegged Ben Stiller is? It distracts me to no end.
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