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

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

I want to see a video of an angler fish eating


Search
: anglerfish eating

Why
: On "How the Male Angler Fish Gets Completely Screwed" on Oatmeal (I won't post the whole thing because it's so big):
Answer: Well I can't find anything, probably because the angler fish lives just about on the bottom of the ocean. But this is a kind of neat compilation of bioluminescent sea monsters:
But how do they even know that eating thing is true? I bet someone just made it up.

Source
: :(

The More You Know
: Maybe look at this informative graphic. Click on it, plz:

Has a crocodile ever really terrorized a village?


Search
: giant crocodile terrorize

Why: You might guess that it's because I watched Dinocroc vs. Supergator this weekend,
but it's not. It's because Leigh was talking about Rogue (which I have not yet seen, but you better believe that I plan to).

Answer
: Omg yes! Very recently! From May 24, 2010:

Crocodiles terrorize Kenya village, gobbling up human prey

Villagers in Kenya are literally being eaten alive as crocodiles in the Tana River target human prey with devastating success. People in the village Bilisa say crocodile attacks are on the rise and have claimed 6 lives in the last year.

The crocodiles usually go after women who come to the river for water. Dhiramu Batefu of was gobbled up two weeks ago, while she was collecting water for her family.

"[The crocodile] splashed her with water and grabbed and pulled her into the deep water," said Batefu Hanti, the victim's husband.

After snatching its prey and dragging them underwater, the crocodile always resurfaces for a moment with the victim in its mouth, villagers say.

The crocodile problem has been made worse by the village's broken borehole, or water well, which used to allow villagers to get water without going to the river.

"We are asking well-wishers to repair for us the borehole," villager Mzee Dube Molu said. "Crocodiles will finish our people."

Yiiiipes!! And in 2008:
Raging, Gargantuan Crocodile Terrorizes Australian Workers

A huge crocodile has been terrorizing road workers in the Gulf of Carpentaria after a rival male was shot and beheaded by trophy hunters. Wildlife rangers revealed the 5.8m crocodile had become highly aggressive in the aftermath of the illegal killing three weeks ago of its smaller rival.

Officers said the big croc has since been stalking and lunging at construction crews working on a bridge on the Albert River near Burketown.

“He is a monster and he is very upset,” said Carpentaria Land Council ranger coordinator Kevin Anderson. “He has been hanging around the bridge and snapping and lunging at anything in the water. Those workers need eyes in their backsides.”

Mr Anderson said the huge bull croc became enraged when the dead body of the killed crocodile, a rival male living upstream, floated through his territory.

Workers at the construction site used a large crane to pull the dead 4.4m reptile from the water. It had a bullet wound in its side. Later that night, an unknown “trophy hunter” cut off its head.

“The big croc, twice the size of the one that was killed, will now fight and kill at least three other male crocs as they try to take over the territory.”

Meanwhile, the 4.3 meter crocodile believed to have taken tourist Arthur Booker near Cooktown two weeks ago will probably go to a crocodile farm. Under the state’s crocodile management plan no animal involved in an attack is allowed to be put on display.

“It will not be released back into the wild,” a spokeswoman said. “As it is an iconic animal, the crocodile will not be harmed or killed.”

Shooting this crocodile was a mistake - his angry, massive, brother has sworn a blood oath of revenge against Australians

Alligators occasionally terrorize towns, too!

Source
: NY Daily News, Fear Beneath

The More You Know
: But Rogue is based on the true story of Sweetheart, a giant crocodile in 1970s Australia who hated the sound of outboard motors so much that he just chewed them up. He was like 70 or 80 years old and 5.5 meters long. That's great big! Now he's stuffed in a tacky museum and ready to pose with you!

Monday, June 28, 2010

Are citizen's arrests a real thing?


Search
: citizen's arrest

Why
: And can I make one? And how?

Answer
: Sure! In many/most countries, a private citizen has the right to detain a suspected criminal until law enforcement personnel can assume custody.
The practice can be traced back to English common law during the Middle Ages, although each country or state can modify the rules of engagement. During the earliest days of modern justice systems, performing a citizen's arrest was a much more common practice. Merchants would routinely detain shoplifters and thieves caught in the act, often bringing them directly to a local constable's office for trial.Now, the practice is less common because a) there are more policemen and b) criminals are better armed. Some reasons to not perform a citizen's arrest:
  • You could get seriously injured or dead.
  • If you make a mistake and detain an innocent suspect, you could be srsly fckd.
But if you so choose, you can make a legal citizen's arrest based on immediacy. Ex:
  • You witness a mugging and then detain the mugger.
  • You witness a scenario with serious potential for crime, e.g. a masked man walking toward a car with a crowbar.
This would still be true even if the 'crime' turned out to be a misunderstanding. If someone sees a man climbing through a broken window, he cannot be held responsible for false arrest if the man turns out to be the owner of the building who lost his keys.
But your best bet is just to observe the details of the suspect and the crime scene, like a license plate number, physical description, type of weapon, number of times he bludgeons that hobo, etc. Then you can tell the police and make a signed statement with intent to press charges.
Source: WiseGeek

The More You Know
: Do you know the difference between e.g. and i.e.? A quick review:
  • e.g. - exempli gratia, "for example"
I watched several movies this weekend, e.g. Heathers, Dinocroc vs. Supergator, Beetlejuice, and at least half of Oldboy.
  • i.e. - id est, "that is"
My imminent new favorite movie, i.e. Roger Corman's Sharktopus, still does not have a goddamn release date.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

What's the origin of the word "ramble"?


Search
: ramble etymology

Why
: In On Beauty by Zadie Smith:
It was the shady groves of dictionaries that Jack fell in love, bowed his head in awe and thrilled at an unlikely tale, for example, the bizarre etymology of the intransitive verb 'ramble.'
Answer: It comes from the Dutch words rammalen and rammen, which mean "to copulate with," specifically referring to cats! WHAT!
"used of the night wanderings of the amorous cat"
That is from the late 14th century. Then came something or other about walking around. The meaning "to talk or write incoherently" first appeared in the 1630s.

Source: Podictionary, EtymOnline

The More You Know
: "Ramblin' Rose" is a kind of boring country-sounding song by Nat King Cole.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Why do moths go to light?


Search
: why do moths go to flames

Why
: The other night, one bounced around the TV for a while before it flew into Chandler's beer and he ate it.

Answer: Who knows! Bug researcher Henry Hsiao said they do 2 things:
  1. When far away from a light source (up to 200 ft.), they fly straight toward it. Maybe they think light = people = stuff to eat, or maybe light = other moths.
  2. When they get close to the light, they try to avoid it. Now, daylight and bright light = danger.
But it doesn't fly directly away from the light because, like all sighted animals, it perceives the region immediately surrounding the light as darker than any part of the sky. This is called the Mach band. The moth, being kind of dumb, thinks this dark space is the safest part of the sky, and so it circles it until it finds something better to do, like flit around another light.

Here's a thing of a time exposure at a floodlight showing the flight paths of some moths:
Source
: The Straight Dope

The More You Know: I would like to see this movie. No sir, that's no bug co-moon:

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

What is wasabi?


Search
: wasabi

Why
: You can grow it on Farmville! It looks like this! (in the middle; the other stuff is bamboo; I was going for a theme):
I thought it was just the name of a condiment, like mayonnaise.

Answer: It's a root vegetable! It is grated into a powder and mixed with water to make a paste. Don't eat it!
Source: Japan-Guide.com

The More You Know
: Speaking of things I don't eat, some theories about the origin of mayonnaise:
  • In 1459, a London woman named Annamarie Turcauht stumbled upon this condiment after trying to create a custard of some sort.
  • The name comes from the popular corruption of moyeunaise, derived from the very old French word moyeu, "yolk of egg."
  • The sauce may have been christened mayennaise after Charles de Lorraine, duke of Mayenne, because he finished his meal of chicken with cold sauce before being defeated in the Battle of Arques in 1589.
  • French chef and author Marie Antonie Careme (1784-1833) proclaimed that mayonnaise was derived from the word magnonaise (magner means "made by hand" or "stir").
  • The recipe was brought back to France from the town of Mahon in Menorca (Spain), after a victory over the British at the city's port in 1756. The sauce was originally known as salsa mahonesa in Spanish (maonesa in Catalan, as it is still known on Menorca), later becoming mayonnaise as it was popularized by the French.
  • The French cities Bayonne and Les Mayons also claim to be the birthplace[s] of mayonnaise. It is thought that "mayonnaise" could be a corruption of "bayonnaise" sauce. Today, bayonnaise is mayonnaise flavored with Espelette chiles.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

How long does it take for roofies to start working?


Search
: how long before roofies take effect

Why
: In Lifetime movies, the dizzy spins seem to happen almost immediately.

Answer: Somewhere between 10 and 30 minutes! The effects peak within 2 hours, and they may persist for more than 8 hours, depending on the dosage!
Source: OHS, Yahoo! Answers

The More You Know
: Rohypnol is a trade name. The generic name of the drug is Flunitrazepam. It's marketed as a strong hypnotic and powerful sedative, anticonvulsant, anxiolytic, amnestic, and skeletal muscle relaxant drug. Before it's mashed up and poured in your lycheetini, it looks like this:

I want to see some artwork by George Vlosich III


Search
: George Vlosich

Why
: Martin posted this Etch-a-Sketch thing Vlosich III made of "J.Z, Kanye west (I think) and maybe a boxer?" (lolwut / that's racist):
Answer: Well here's that one in progress:
And more:
Cleveland!
Source: GVETCHEDINTIME

The More You Know: Watch George III talk and work here and listen to a really phenomenal song here:

Monday, June 21, 2010

What's the origin of the term "gringo"?


Search
: gringo origin

Why: Leigh said it refers to Americans in general, not just whiteys, because of their "green coats." Or something.

Answer
: No one knows for sure! Its first recorded English use was in John Woodhouse Audubon's 1849 Western Journal:
We were hooted and shouted at as we passed through, and called ‘Gringoes.’
Theories:
  • It comes from griego, the Spanish word for Greek, as in "It's Greek to me," aka hablar es griego ("speak in Greek"). Here, "Greek" is both incomprehensible and spoken by a foreigner or stranger.
  • During the Mexican-American War, American soldiers wore green coats.

(or did they?)
  • It comes from the early 1500s song "Green Grows the Holly" (or "Green Grows the Lilacs" or "the Laurels" or "the Rushes Oh!" all based on a poem by Robert Burns). During the Mexican-American War, the song was sung by Catholic American immigrants (from Ireland, Germany, etc.) who had been sent to Mexico to fight. They questioned why they were fighting against other Catholics on the side of Anglo-Protestants, and then several hundred deserted America to form St. Patrick's Battalion, joining the Mexicans to fight against their Protestant abusers.
Source: Snopes, UKQnA, Wikipedia

The More You Know:

What's the name of the thing that connects your top lip to your gums?


Search
: mouth connect lip gums

Why
: I don't remember. We were watching Rules of Attraction or Basic Instinct or Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead, and I got to thinkin about how much it would hurt for that thing to get cut.

Answer
: The frenulum labii superioris! A frenulum is a small fold of tissue that secures or restricts the motion of a mobile organ in the body. You have lots of them on your person (many NSFW).

The one under your tongue is called the frenulum linguae, and the one that connects your bottom lip to your gummies is called the frenulum labii inferioris. Inferioris!!
Source: Yahoo! Answers, Wikipedia

The More You Know
: According to Science Geek Girl, that diagram of the taste stations in your tongue you saw in your 7th grade Health book was just wrong.
Instead!
  • The exact distribution of sensitivity depends on the particular person doing the tasting.
  • There is a 5th taste called umami, aka "deliciousness." It’s the flavor of amino acids (like meat broth, aged cheese, or glutamate, like monosodium glutamate) which explains why things with MSG taste so good. There’s also some debate about a 6th receptor for fat.
  • Your sense of smell plays a huge role in what you taste. If you plug your nose, it can be difficult to tell the difference between a potato and an apple. That’s why things taste bland when your nose is stuffy.
  • Your taste sensations depend on the temperature of your tongue. That’s why Ben & Jerry’s serves their ice cream slightly warm in their tasting room - to enhance its sweetness.

What is Sloane Peterson up to?


Search
: ferris bueller

Why: Haven't seen her in a while.
Answer: Oh, not much. In the 90s, Mia Sara was in a bunch of movies I've never heard of, and also Timecop.

This year, she'll be in something called The Witches of OZ 3D, which I kind of want to watch, because 3D is my ATF. Feast your eyes on the trailer / director running his mouth here:
Source: IMDb

The More You Know
: Have you ever noticed that people on IMDb are sorta numbered? Well they are. For example, this guy (Mahershalalhasbaz Ali) is #0991810 (according to the link to his page). I imagine this is from when the site first started and they just had to start cataloguing people.

Anyway, Mia Sara is #214. I kind of want to go through and find which 213 people were before her, but instead, here is a short list. Enjoy it:
  • 1 (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000001) - Fred Astaire
  • 2 - Lauren Bacall
  • 3 - Brigitte Bardot
  • 4 - John Belushi
  • 5 - Ingmar Bergman
  • 6 - Ingrid Berman
  • 7 - Humphrey Bogart
  • 8 - Marlon Brando
  • 9 - Richard Burton
  • 10 - James Cagney
  • 111 - Matthew Broderick

Friday, June 18, 2010

What's the song in that Schwinn commercial?


Search
: "i think i found the answer in your smile"

Why
: I just saw it on Brrravo. It made me want to replace the rusty chains on my bike.
Answer: "Just a Dream" by A.M. Sixty! Here's the rest of it:
Source: Yahoo! Answers

The More You Know: Lyrics:
Thinkin maybe that I met you in a dream
When I'm with you
Life is too good to be true
I think I found the answer in your smile
Don't go
Please stay with me a while
Is this just a dream
Or is it my reality
When I wake up from this sleep
Will you still be lying next to me

What's the origin of the word shyster?


Search
: shyster

Why
: I'm not sure whether or not I should pretend to be offended. Is it related to Shylock?

Answer: No! First, the definition:
n. a person who uses unscrupulous, fraudulent, or deceptive methods in business. Historically, it has mainly been applied to lawyers.
The term first appeared in print in the New York newspaper The Subterranean in 1843 in a story about the notorious prison known as The Tombs. In the 1840s, it was full of unscrupulous and parasitic charlatans who pretended to be lawyers and officers of the court, also known as "pettifoggers." The editor of that newspaper described shysters like a-this:
Ignorant blackguards, illiterate blockheads, besotted drunkards, drivelling simpletons, ci-devant mountebanks, vagabonds, swindlers and thieves make up, with but few exceptions, the disgraceful gang of pettifoggers who swarm about its halls.
In that decade, the word went from meaning "an incompetent person" to specifically mean "a crooked lawyer."

It comes from the German word Scheisser, "an incompetent person," which came to New York through German immigrants. That word comes from Scheisse, "shit," as in an incontinent old man. British slang of the same period used the same word, spelled shicer, that meant "a worthless person."

So anyway, yes, offended, but not for the reason I thought.

Source: World Wide Words

The More You Know
: The Tombs is the nickname for the Manhattan Detention Complex at 125 White St. Maybe you have heard about it on "SVU." The old and new buildings looked like this and this (in 1896 and 1907):
Now they are connected by a Bridge of Sighs, the view from which is the last thing convicts see before their imprisonment (how adorbs is that name?). It's named after the one in Venice (the Ponte dei Sospiri), and there are a bunch more in other places.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Wtf happened to Jeremy London?


Search
: jeremy london

Why: The news ticker on the TV downstairs said "Suspect arrested in kidnapping of actor Jeremy London." WHAT!

Answer: He was kidnapped or something! June 10!
London says he was kidnapped June 10 while changing a flat tire; he claims he was helped by several men, but upon offering them a ride home, one pulled a gun and forced London to drive around and do drugs, then stole London’s car.
Sounds fishy to me.
Police said one man later pulled a gun, forced London to drive around, buy alcohol and take drugs.

London said he escaped but his car was stolen. Police later found it and on June 11 arrested 26-year-old Brandon Adams of Palm Springs.

Ok, Speidi.

Adams has been charged with kidnapping and other crimes and remains jailed.
Source: EW.com, AP

The More You Know
: Jeremy and his identical twin Jason London have only acted alongside each other once - in a February 2003 episode of the 7th Heaven, "Smoking." They have also competed for the same role - Jeremy's first audition was for a part in the 1991 film The Man in the Moon, which Jason won, leaving Jeremy the part of his brother's stunt double.

Also, what happened to them (aside being forced to take drugs):

What day of the week was I born?


Search
: what day of the week

Why
: This is apparently a proverb:
Monday's child is fair of face,
Tuesday's child is full of grace,
Wednesday's child is full of woe,
Thursday's child has far to go,
Friday's child is loving and giving,
Saturday's child works hard for its living,
And a child that's born on the Sabbath day
Is fair and wise and good and gay.
Answer: Tuesday! How about you?

Source
: This Day of the Week thing

The More You Know
: Here is a funny tombstone.
He was born on May 13, 1683 and died on February 19 of the same year! WHAT!

Jk, that kid was 9 months old. Remember when we talked about the new year starting March 25?

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

I want to see a picture of a kirin


Search
: kirin; qilin

Why: Chandler and I had a nice talk about Japanese beer names and their meanings. A quick review:
  • Asahi - "morning sun"
  • Ichiban - "number one"
  • Kirin - "giraffe"
  • Sapporo - a city in Hokkaido, which is the northernmost big island / prefecture of Japan
BUT! I just looked this business up again (because the eavesdropping waitress giggled a little, what a b) and turns out the name kirin actually comes from the name for "a mythical horned Chinese deer-like creature that is said to appear only when a sage has appeared." WHAT!

Answer: Omg it's so majestic!!
The name may also be spelled qilin, kylin, kyrin, or qilin (pronounced "kay-lun" in Cantonese).
It is a good omen that brings serenity and prosperity. It is often depicted with what looks like fire all over its body. In most drawings, its head looks like that of a Chinese dragon. The qilin is sometimes translated as unicorn in English, because it is superficially similar to the unicorn in being a hooved imaginary beast having a single horn on its head.
Here is a statue of one in front of Beijing's Summer Palace. Zuul Y/Y?
The Qilin could recognise whether a person was guilty or not. Although it looks fearsome, the Qilin only punishes the sinners; when it walked on grass, it could not trample it. Being a peaceful creature, its diet did not include flesh.
In Japanese, the qilin is called a kirin. Japanese art tends to depict the qilin as more deerlike than in Chinese art. The word kirin has come to be used in modern Japanese for a giraffe.
But that thing on the Kirin label is a magical fire unicorn. Why don't I have a giant tattoo of it on my person? Yet?

Source: Knowledge Rush, Google Images

The More You Know
: I feel as though someone is pulling my leg with this shit. Who still needs something to wear to the My Little Pony party?

Is jenkem for real?


Search: jankem; jenkem

Why
: Brian and Ian said it's the hot drug in the third world, describing it as "your own pi--" ... I don't even want to write it. They said you eliminate in a jar and then huff it to get high. They mimed it.

Answer
: Yup! The facts:
  • Jenkem (or jekem) is the common name for an inhalant made by fermenting raw sewage (aka poop and pee) used by children in third world countries to produce a cheap dissociative or hallocinogenic high.
  • From a 1995 report: "Human excreta is scooped up from the edges of the sewer ponds in old cans and containers which are covered with a polyethylene bag and left to stew or ferment for a week." They take "care to leave enough room for methane to form at the top."
  • It may or may not also be called Waste, Fruit from Crack Pipe, or Butthash.
  • Initial reports came from Lusaka, Zambia in 1995.
  • A quote from 16 year-old Luke Mpande: "With glue, I just hear voices in my head. But with Jenkem, I see visions. I see my mother who is dead and I forget about the problems in my life."
  • It is not a major problem in schools in Collier County, FL, Coffee County, AL, or any other place in the U.S.
Source: Snopes, Wikipedia

The More You Know
: Let's make a movie.
Wil,

I probably made a mess. And you deserve better.
But love me to take this onto your life, and bear it.
Find another, and carry me in your heart.
I talk to you from there. I talk to you from there.

Love,
Luke Mpande

How old was the youngest person to ever get Alzheimer's?


Search
: youngest alzheimer's

Why: I don't remember... lulz.

Answer: 27! What!
It is very rare to show signs of dementia before age 40, however the youngest person ever diagnosed with Alzheimer's was 27 years of age. Alzheimer's and Down's Syndrome are both on chromosome 21, and patients who have Down's Syndrome invariably develop Alzheimer's if they live long enough.
I also see a few notes that say "as early as 16 years of age," but no real sources, so let's ignore them.

Any Alzheimer's diagnosed before the age of 65 is called early-onset Alzheimer's disease, but it makes up only 5-10% of sufferers (in 2006, there were 26.6 million people with the disease worldwide).
Source: Aging Care, CBS, Wikipedia

The More You Know
: In 1906, the disease was first described by German psychiatrist and neuropathologist Alois Alzheimer as "presenile dementia."

Friday, June 11, 2010

What are some names of baby animals?


Search
: baby animal names

Why
: I learned in White Oleander that a baby rabbit is called a kit.

Answer: Here are some you might not know!
  • Alpaca - cria
  • Ape - baby
  • Badger - kit, cub
  • Beaver, Ferret, Fox, Serval, Skunk, Weasel, Woodchuck - kit
  • Boar - farrow, shoat, or piglet
  • Chicken - chick, pullet (young hen), cockrell (young rooster)
  • Cicada, Cockroach, Grasshopper - nymph

  • Cod - codling, hake, sprag, sprat
  • Echidna, Platypus - puggle
  • Grouse - cheeper, chick, poult, or squealer
  • Hawk - eyas
  • Jellyfish - ephyra
  • Mosquito - nymph, tumbler, or wriggler
  • Peacock - peachick
  • Pigeon - squab, squeaker
  • Porcupine - porcupette
  • Rat - kitten, pinkie, pup
  • Sand Dollar, Sea Urchin - juvenile, larva, pluteus

  • Sheep - cosset, lamb, lambkin

  • Snake - snakelet, neonate

  • Squirrel - pup, kit, kitten

  • Swan - cygnet, flapper

  • Tiger - cub, whelp

  • Trout - fingerling, fry

  • Turkey - poult

Source: ZooBorns

The More You Know
: I am listening to White Oleander on audiobook, and it is read by Oprah. If you are ever interested in hearing Oprah yell out, "You f-ing c-word!" (but with the real words), it's on Disc 1, track 9, and so hilarious.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

What's the song on the newest Amazon Kindle commercial?


Search
: "couldn't love you more so come on"; annie little

Why
: It was on last night during "Glee," which I am watching now.

Answer
: "Come On Let's Go" by Little and Ashley!

I couldn't find the song anywhere, but since I know the last 2 Kindle commercials (from December and March) were sung by Little and Ashley, I figured maybe this one is too. And hey! what do you know, they have posted a new song called "Come On Let's Go."
Those people are Paula Miranda and Melissa L.

Source
: MySpace

The More You Know: I think these are the lyrics:
You're the twinkle in my eye
Show me what's beneath the sky
Across a landscape far and wide
Time stops when you're by my side

Dear, do you
I couldn't love you more than I do
Do do you know
I couldn't love you more,
so come on, let's go

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

I want to hear that song that goes "Alors on danse"


Search
: alors en danse stromea

Why
: Fuller - who has been living in Amsterdam for a long time - was singing it Saturday while getting all up in my bleu cheese.

Answer
: It's by Stromae, who is Belgian-Rwandan. The clip officiel is here, but I can't embed it. Let's go to the discothèque.
Source: YouTube

The More You Know
: Discothèque is a portmanteau from Greek diskos, "records" + theke, "storage"

What is a lilikoi?


Search
: lillikoi; lilikoi

Why
: In the song "Boy Lilikoi" on his solo album Go, Jónsi (the fellow from Sigur Ros, jicydak) says:
I want to be a lilikoi, Boy Lilikoi
You grind your claws, you howl, you growl unafraid of hoi polloi
You run, you're free, you climb endless trees - you reignite
You growl, you howl, you show your teeth
You bite, it's alright
It's real nice. Feast your ears:
Answer: A kind of yellow passion fruit! Lilikoi is its Hawaiian name, and it grows throughout the Pacific Islands and Central and South America. In fact!, it grows so well in some places that it is a bit of a pest! It looks like this:
Source: Tradewinds Fruit

The More You Know
: Do you know what a passion flower looks like? Dangerous, is what:

Monday, June 7, 2010

Does a woodpecker really wrap its tongue around its brain?


Search
: woodpecker tongue brain

Why
: We saw a beautiful woodpecker pecking wood whilst preparing Bowl Game the other day. Kateloh said woodpeckers wrap their tongues around their brains so they don't jiggle around and get concussed.

Answer
: Well, sorta, but that's not why. They do have really tight skulls that hold everything in place. They also have crazy weird tongues. They are sharp and pointed at the tips and have rear-facing barbs that catch and hold food that they find inside the little holes they make in trees. The tongues are long and stretchy, sometimes extending as long as 3 times the length of the beak.
In some, the tongue is so long that it forks in the throat, goes below the base of the jaw, and wraps behind and over the top of the head, where the forks rejoin and insert in the bird's right nostril or around the eye socket. WHAT!
Source: Hilton Pond

The More You Know
: This is what Woody Woodpecker looked like in 1941. Nice chompers.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Will white wine really remove a red wine stain?


Search
: white wine remove red wine

Why
: Chandler saw a guy try it, but didn't see the aftermath, and I had full-on doubt that it worked. Then I just got an article to edit about removing wine stains, and it says, "Pour White Wine on a Red Wine Stain."

Answer
: Kinda! Through neutralization. It is a good first step:
When red wine is spilled onto your carpet or clothes, white wine can be your true companion. White wine will neutralize red wine and will make it easier to lift the color off of your carpet or clothing. Simply pour white wine over the stained area and very gently blot the liquid up with a thick towel (be very careful not to rub as this will force the stain into the carpet or clothing fibers).

Once you have the majority of the spill blotted up, take your favorite carpet shampoo or clothing stain remover, whichever the case may be, and clean as you would if the wine stain were a bit of dirt on the carpet or clothing.
Source: Wine.about.com

The More You Know
: That thing Mikhail Gorbachev has on his head is called a port wine stain vascular birthmark.
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