Bikini!
What a funny thing for your Two Chums to come up with the week before Thanksgiving, you might say, but we saw this and thought, “Who doesn’t always love a little laugh?”!
Read moreNov 21
It’s been said that money makes the world go round. It’s also been said that money is the root of all evil. Whichever theory you subscribe to, both of these contrasting views highlight the ubiquity of currency in modern society.
Read moreTraffic accidents were a problem long before motor vehicles dominated the road — pedestrians, horses, and carts all competed for the right of way, sometimes with fatal results. In fact, the first traffic signal in Britain predated cars.
Read moreToday, we remember the wonderful people, both men and women, who gave their lives for freedom. It is indeed a solemn day and begets our wholehearted thought, prayer and love.
But, we are left with a lot of good things from World War II.
Read moreTomorrow is election day. Two parties, the Republicans and the Democrats have put forth their candidates for local, state government positions and of course that of President of the United States. Elephants and Donkeys can be seen everywhere. But why you may well ask, are the donkey and the elephant the symbols of their respective parties? We wondered that too.
Read moreThe number 13 has long been considered unlucky in many Western cultures. Even today — in a world far less superstitious than it was in the past — a surprising amount of people have a genuine, deep-rooted fear of the number 13, known as triskaidekaphobia. For this reason, many hotels don’t list the presence of a 13th floor (Otis Elevators reports85% of its elevator panels omit the number), and many airlines skip row 13.
And the more specific yet directly connected fear of Friday the 13th, known as paraskevidekatriaphobia, results in financial losses in excess of $800 million annually in the United States as significant numbers of people avoid traveling, getting married, or even working on the unlucky day. But why is 13 considered such a harbinger of misfortune? What has led to this particular number being associated with bad luck? While historians and academics aren’t entirely sure of the exact origins of the superstition, there are a handful of historical, religious, and mythological matters that may have combined to create the very real fear surrounding the number 13.
The Code of Hammurabi was one of the earliest and most comprehensive legal codes to be proclaimed and written down. It dates back to the Babylonian King Hammurabi, who reigned from 1792 to 1750 BCE. Carved onto a massive stone pillar, the code set out some 282 rules, including fines and punishments for various misdeeds, but the 13th rule was notably missing. The artifact is often cited as one of the earliest recorded instances of 13 being perceived as unlucky and therefore omitted. Some scholars argue, however, that it was simply a clerical error. Either way, it may well have contributed to the long-standing negative associations surrounding the number 13.
The idea of 13 being unlucky may have originated with, or at least have been bolstered by, a story in Norse mythology involving the trickster god Loki. In this particular myth, 12 gods are having a dinner party at Valhalla when a 13th — and uninvited — guest arrives. It is the mischievous Loki, who sets about contriving a situation in which Hoder, the blind god of darkness, fatally shoots Balder the Beautiful, the god of joy and gladness, with an arrow. It’s possible that this ill-fated myth helped cement the number’s connection to chaos and misfortune in Nordic cultures, and in Western civilization more widely.
Christianity has also helped fuel the superstition surrounding the number 13. In the New Testament — as in Norse mythology — there is a fateful gathering centered around a meal, in this case the Last Supper. At the dinner, Jesus Christ gathers with his Twelve Apostles — making 13 attendees in total. Judas Iscariot, the apostle who betrayed Jesus, is often considered to have been the 13th guest to sit down at the Last Supper, which might have contributed to the number’s negative connotation. This, in turn, may have led to the notion of Friday the 13th being a day of misfortune or malevolence, as the Last Supper (with its 13 attendees) was on a Thursday, and the next day was Friday, the day of the crucifixion.
It’s also possible that 13 gained a bad reputation because of the squeaky-clean nature of the number 12. In Christian numerology, 12 symbolizes God’s power and authority and carries a notion of completeness (a concept also found in pre-Christian societies). Its neighboring numeral may have suffered as a result, being seen as conflicting with this sense of goodness and perfection, further adding to the potent and enduring idea that the number 13 is unlucky.
So, dear Chums, you make your own minds up! True or false?
Oct 21
Bell-bottoms have long been synonymous with sailors in the U.S. Navy: just picture Sailor Jack, the patriotic mascot who first appeared on boxes of Cracker Jack in 1918, or Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly dancing and singing in the 1945 musical Anchors Aweigh. During World War II, songwriter Moe Jaffe even reworked the lyrics of a bawdy 19th-century English sea shanty into “Bell Bottom Trousers,” a song about a woman’s love for her sailor, who wore “bell bottom trousers, coat of navy blue.”
Read moreOct 14
Oct 10
Well before the name Kellogg became synonymous with milk-infused breakfast fare and animated tigers, it was associated with health.
Read moreOct 3
James Joyce didn’t just write some of the most acclaimed novels of the 20th century — he did so using crayon.
Read moreSep 20
Today we want to share the best beauty secret we know about, with you, our chums.
Read moreSep 9
For the most-visited tourist site in the U.S., New York City’s Times Square had humble beginnings.
Read moreSep 5
Everybody loves a quiz. It is the basis of many popular games, Trivial Pursuit for example. Today we have a fun quiz involving some quotes that are commonly repeated. You may well have used many of these yourself. But do you know who said them?
Read moreSep 4
There’s something about diamonds that catches our eyes and won’t let go.
Read moreAug 16
It is so interesting how everything changes ~ including what we are asked to say when taking a photo!
Photographers have relied on the magic of “cheese” for decades –
Read moreAug 13
Aug 1
The French medals are, as one would imagine, unique to France! Each medalist will take home a small part of the Eiffel Tower!
Read moreJul 30
For most people who have visited Paris, it is a city like no other filled with deliciousness, both to eat and to look at!
Read moreJul 29
Well, we will suffice it to say that we imagine that most of you have been watching the Olympics, starting with the amazing Opening!
Read moreJul 19
Every year millions of people get braces or have their wisdom teeth pulled. That’s because there isn’t enough dental real estate in the average human mouth. Although a boon for the dental profession, humanity’s mass malocclusion (or misalignment of teeth) wasn’t always this way.
Read moreJul 18
We all use toothpaste every day and don’t think much about it but it has been around a very long time!The ancient Egyptians are known for many firsts. Hieroglyphics, papyrus, the calendar, and even bowling all come from the minds of the ancient people along the Nile. Egyptians were also some of the first to pay particular attention to oral care. They invented the first breath mint, toothpicks have been found alongside mummies, and they created the oldest known formula for toothpaste. Holy smokes!
Read moreJul 8
Thanks to the 1975 blockbuster Jaws, a generation of people have grown up with the mistaken belief that sharks are man-eating monsters, intent on attacking anything that moves. Scientists have worked hard to dispel such myths about the ancient creatures which roam every ocean and vary widely in size, shape, diet, habitat, and attitude. Here are a few facts about these fascinating fish.
Read moreJun 25
There are an estimated 75,000 palm trees in Los Angeles, all of which have one thing in common: they are not native there. Despite being an L.A. icon on par with the Hollywood sign and Dodger Stadium, the tropical tree is no more a native Angeleno than, well, the Dodgers. Not unlike the Hollywood sign, palms were originally a marketing technique for developers hoping to attract newcomers to the area in the late 19th century.
They got the idea from the French Riviera — another area palms aren’t actually native to — where like-minded developers had successfully used them just a few decades before to cultivate an image of glitz and glamour.
In addition to being beautiful, palms are surprisingly easy to uproot and transport from their native tropical and subtropical environments in the Middle East, Mexico, and elsewhere, so tens of thousands of them were planted all across the California city that had once been desert scrubland.
It seems fitting that one of Los Angeles’ most enduring symbols was essentially a branding strategy chosen for its aesthetic appeal, doubly so because palm trees’ association with the city was (and is) further cemented by their ubiquity in the many films shot there. After all, most of the directors, actors, and studio executives who made Hollywood what it is today weren’t originally from the City of Angels either.
So, there you have it. Much like the movie industry whose main home is Los Angeles, California, palm trees were brought in to create an illusion.
Jun 19
You’ve probably heard the phrase “Napoleon complex” which refers to the idea that small creatures — whether people or Pomeranians — often act as if they’re much bigger than they really are, supposedly in an attempt to overcompensate for their lack of stature.
Read moreJun 11
You might think the science behind microwaves is relatively simple — the machine produces microwaves (as its name suggests), which in turn warm up your food. However, that’s only partially correct.
Read moreJun 3
We all know Clark Gable in his signature roll as Captain Rhett Butler in the classic film of 1939, Gone With The Wind. But that was certainly not Gables first film. Did you know? Clark gave his Oscar for It Happened One Night (1934) to a child who admired it, telling him it was the winning of the statue that had mattered, not owning it. The child returned the Oscar to the Gable family after Clark’s death.
Read moreMay 29
Born in France and raised in England, chemist James Smithson (1765–1829) was well traveled, spending significant chapters of his life in Switzerland, Germany, and Italy.
Read moreMay 28
What’s the world’s biggest airport? What about the busiest? Why is there an “X” in PDX? Is there a way to get a nap between flights? And what happens to all the change you leave in airport security bins?
Airports are big, crowded, and full of questions. The following 15 facts might change the way you catch your next flight — or at least end some mysteries.
Read moreMay 21
May 14
Did you know that elephants are matriarchal?
Unlike gorillas, wild turkeys, and many other male-dominant species, elephants are matriarchal. The leader of each herd (the group is also sometimes known as a memory) tends to be the oldest and largest female around. She has a lot of responsibility — a herd can consist of anywhere from eight to one hundred elephants, and includes many calves that the entire group looks after. Elephants aren’t the only matriarchal species, though.v Lemurs, meerkats, spotted hyenas, orcas, and many other animals are also led by females; killer whales, in fact, stay with their mothers their entire lives.
Even so, patriarchies are far more common. Of the 76 nonhuman mammals analyzed in one study, the vast majority were led by males.
Whether a species is matriarchal or patriarchal depends on a variety of factors, including physical strength, longevity, and the social bonds they form with one another. Female hyenas are stronger than their male counterparts, for instance, whereas “elephant females are born to leadership” in part because they’re better at remembering the location of water and other vital resources, according to Cynthia Moss of Amboseli Trust for Elephants.
Also, did you know this about elephant tusks?
It’s common knowledge that elephant tusks are made of ivory. Less well-known is the fact that they’re actually teeth. Deeply rooted and made of a bony tissue called dentin, tusks are also covered in enamel. They never stop growing, meaning that an elephant with especially long tusks is likely old and wise. Also, no two tusks are alike. Not all elephants have tusks, however — most African elephants do, but only some male Asian elephants grow them.
Oh those wonderful elephants!
May 9
The animal kingdom is full of incredible variety, thanks to evolution, but one thing most animals have in common is that they use a set of eyes to navigate the world around them. But even the pupil of the eyeball, the biological aperture responsible for how much light enters the eyes, is nearly as diverse as the types of birds that soar the skies or fish that swim the seas.
Read moreMay 6
Whenever we hear of a horse race, we are reminded of dear Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady when she is taken to the Royal Enclosure at the races and when her horse needs to go faster, she says, “Come on Dover! Move your bloomin’ arse!”
Read moreMay 3
Well, at the risk of sounding a little crude, we came across this and thought you might all get a tee tee out of it.
Read moreMay 2
If you have a child or have gone through childhood, you likely have read the books and know the stories about Curious George. But do you know the rest of Curious George’s story?
Read moreApr 26
Apr 25
Night owls have a reputation for being lazy, but many of them might just have drastically different internal clocks than early birds and others.
Read moreApr 24
From Duns to Einstein! It was pointed out in yesterday’s post that, in fact, the name “dunce” came from a very smart gentleman, John Duns Scotus, whereas in colloquial speech, that name brings to thought someone with nothing upstairs.
Now, let’s look at Albert Einstein who brings just the opposite to thought!
Read moreApr 23
Dunce was named for a very smart gentleman!
Although his name draws scant recognition from most today, John Duns Scotus was among the towering intellectual figures of medieval Europe.
Read moreApr 16
Summer is coming and no doubt you are thinking about travel plans. We have noted that Portugal is a very popular country to visit and so thought you might be interested in this!
Read moreApr 3
Mar 28
Good Friday, we know. And Easter most certainly. But what is Maundy Thursday?
Read moreMar 27
Mar 19
Early subway systems were hatched as a solution to the problem that sprang up when rapidly growing cities in the wake of the Industrial Revolution found themselves unable to expand where they needed it most — in their centers. Streets, built wide enough for modest horse and carriage traffic, were now jammed to a standstill by horse-drawn public buses and private carts, trolleys and streetcars, delivery carts, pedestrians, and eventually automobiles. So, tunnels were dug beneath the streets — and subways were born. Swipe your ticket in these 10 cities with the oldest subway systems around the world.
Read moreMar 8
No matter if it’s a local stage show or a major Broadway production, these long-held theater traditions and superstitions are still going strong.
Read moreMar 1
Meeting Prince Ranier of Monaco in 1955.
A name synonymous with all things bright and beautiful, let’s find out some more about this amazing lady.
Read moreFeb 29
Feb 27
We came across this dear article about the (many) animals who mate for life and thought we would share it with you. Yes, you guessed it, Interesting Facts shared this with us.
Animals are not normally known for exercising restraint when it comes to reproduction. But for all the attention paid to the promiscuity of busy breeders like dogs and jackrabbits, some critters display a different side of animal nature by mostly sticking with one partner. Scientists call these animals “socially monogamous” — a male “pair bonds” with a female to mate, raise young, and spend time together for the duration of their lives. (Occasionally, one may “cheat” with another mate but quickly return to their partner.) Here are 11 such creatures who know a thing or two about long-term relationships.
Read moreFeb 26
Well, thank you to all of our patient chums!
Yes, we are coming up for air! You should have received a whole bunch of posts over the weekend as we finally figured out how to fix our technical problem! Onward we go, rejoicing, to be sure!
Do you know where the term SCUBA came from?
Read moreFeb 1
Most of us have had the experience of having milk sit in the refrigerator only to realize when it’s poured on our cereal or in our coffee or tea it has turned “sour”. That’s when it gets dumped out. But it wasn’t always like that.
Read moreJan 30
People think they know what the lines on Solo cups are for. Do you?
Read moreJan 29
We have recently come across a number of unique food, and food culture and tradition related questions we thought it would be interesting to answer. So each day this week we will answer a new one. Today is a question regarding the tradition of eating black eyed peas on New Years Day.
Read moreJan 10
Oh, these wonderful bees! We learned a lot by reading this and so wanted to share it with all of you.
Read moreJan 9
On January 9, 1493, (531 years ago to the day) explorer Christopher Cp;umbus, sailing near what is now the Dominican Republic, sees three “mermaids”—in reality manatees—and describes them as “not half as beautiful as they are painted.”
Read moreJan 4
The company now known as 7-Eleven has a history of being ahead of the curve.
Read moreDec 27
There are plenty of ships in the U.S. Navy (291 of them, to be precise), but only one has the curious distinction of flying the Jolly Roger — the ominous flag typically associated with pirates.
Read moreDec 5
Pigeons are wildly misunderstood birds, and they’ve only been considered a nuisance for the last century or so.
Read moreNov 6
The weather is cooling off and we are approaching what people call the cold and flu season. We came across a tasty and simple remedy to help you boost your immune system and stay healthy.
Read moreNov 2
It was during the 1870s and 80s that the Eiffel Company reached its pinnacle and was solicited around the world. But did you know this?
Read moreOct 27
Herbs have all kinds of wonderful qualities beyond there culinary uses. Rosemary has one you may not know about.
Read moreOct 24
On any given day, 37% of adults in the United States pick up a greasy bag of treats from their local fast-food joint. Fast food has been blamed for all kinds of societal ills, particularly ones that are nutrition-related, but we keep eating it anyway. Whether you consume fast food every day or avoid it at all costs, you might not know these six facts about some of America’s most popular fast-food chains.
Read moreOct 23
Niagara Falls is known for the many daredevils who have attempted stunts in its thundering waters.
Read moreOct 18
Did you know that the Bible is the most read and studied book of all time? Most people would agree that the pages of the Bible are filled with wisdom for our daily lives. Whether you happen to be a student of the Bible or not, this is some info you may not know, and we think some wise counsel.
Read moreOct 9
Despite spending most of their days trying to survive and thrive, early people across the globe needed something actually fun to do with their spare time … much like people today. Made from stone, bones, and other handy materials, early games weren’t too far off the ones we play today. And while humans eventually transitioned from stick-based games to those with dice, and later boards, the earliest games show that humans haven’t changed all that much in a quest for good-intentioned victory over family and friends.
Read moreOct 8
Original photo by Ian/Dagnlil Computing/ Alamy Stock Photo
Oscar Wilde was born in 1854 and died in 1900. During those all-too-brief years, he built a reputation that would long outlive him. And while today he is known for his literary works, he is arguably just as famous for his legendary wit — as well as the scandal and ensuing imprisonment that upturned his life.
As a literary figure, Wilde is perhaps best known for his play The Importance of Being Earnest, his only novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, and “The Ballad of Reading Gaol,” a poem he wrote in exile after his release from prison. But when Oscar Wilde’s name is mentioned, it’s not only his writing that people remember. The name is synonymous with flamboyant manners and rapier wit, and a certain type of genius that dazzled society, whether it was in the clubs of London or the lecture halls of the United States.
When Wilde went to the U.S. in 1882 to lecture primarily on aestheticism — an artistic movement that emphasized the aesthetic value of art, or “art for art’s sake” — he encountered a hostile press but was well received by the general public. The trip made him an international star. It also gave rise to one of the most famous quotes attributed to Wilde (though there’s no evidence to support the claim). When he arrived at U.S. customs to begin his tour (so the story goes), he was asked if he had anything to declare. With typical wit, he replied, “I have nothing to declare but my genius.”
Back in London, things turned sour when questions about Wilde’s private life spiraled out of control. His relationships with men became public knowledge, and soon he was charged with gross indecency and sentenced to two years hard labor. His name was tarnished, his reputation left in tatters, and he spent his remaining years in exile in France, where he died in a cheap hotel in 1900. It was a tragic end, and sadly, even today, the events of his life are perhaps more widely known than his work.
But there was a lot more to Wilde than writing, wit, and scandal: He was a complex man with a complex personality. To better understand the man behind the myth, here are a few things you might not know about the ostentatious, brilliant Oscar Wilde.
The Wilde name was well-known before Oscar made his mark. His father, Sir William Wilde, was an acclaimed otolaryngologist (ear, nose, and throat doctor) and ophthalmologist, who wrote significant works on medicine, archaeology, and folklore. His mother, Jane Wilde, was a poet and activist, known for her support of the Irish nationalist movement and women’s rights. As Wilde wrote in “De Profundis” (a letter he wrote from the Reading Gaol prison), “She and my father had bequeathed me a name they had made noble and honored not merely in literature, art, archaeology and science, but in the public history of my own country in its evolution as a nation.”
When Wilde was 12 years old, his little sister, Isola, died of meningitis. He was deeply affected by her death, and later wrote a poem in her memory called “Requiescat”. It’s a beautiful, lyrical poem, in which Isola seems to be at once dead and alive: “Tread lightly, she is near / Under the snow, / Speak gently, she can hear / The daisies grow.
J.E.C. Bodley, a friend of the young Wilde during his Oxford University days, said Wilde was “naïve, embarrassed, with a convulsive laugh, a lisp, and an Irish accent.”. But Wilde adjusted to life at Oxford, and became a brilliant student. He also lost his accent, stating later in life that “my Irish accent was one of the many things I forgot at Oxford”. Wilde’s voice in later life was described by the actor Franklin Dyall as “of the brown velvet order — mellifluous — rounded — in a sense giving it a plummy quality” and “practically pure cello.” Unfortunately, a recording of Wilde reading “The Ballad of Reading Gaol” turned out to be a fake, and no other recordings are known to exist.
While some of Wilde’s works can be described as quintessentially “English” plays, Wilde himself never abandoned his Irish roots. When public performances of his play Salomé were banned in Britain — on the basis of it being illegal to depict biblical characters on the stage — Wilde hit back in an interview, saying “I shall leave England and settle in France, where I will take out letters of naturalization. I will not consent to call myself a citizen of a country that shows such narrowness in its artistic judgment”. He then added, “I am not English; I’m Irish — which is quite another thing”.
In his early twenties, Wilde became besotted with a beautiful young woman called Florence Balcombe. When they first met, he told a friend, “I am just going out to bring an exquisitely pretty girl to afternoon service in the Cathedral. She is just seventeen with the most perfectly beautiful face I ever saw and not a sixpence of money”. They dated for months, but distance put a strain on their relationship. Then Florence met Bram Stoker, who would later go on to write Dracula. They married, and Wilde was devastated. He wrote Florence a letter in which he called their time together “two sweet years — the sweetest of all the years of my youth”. They remained friends for years after.
Due to Wilde’s well-documented relationships with men, people often don’t realize that he was married and had two children. Wilde married Constance Lloyd, an Irish author, in London in 1884. During their first two years of marriage they had two sons together, Cyril and Vyvyan. No one knows when Constance became aware of Oscar’s relations with men, but she met his lover, Lord Alfred Douglas, in 1891. The ensuing scandal and Wilde’s imprisonment placed a great strain on their relationship. Constance changed her surname and moved to Switzerland. She died in 1898, and Oscar never saw his two sons again.
Wilde met Lord Alfred “Bosie” Douglas, who was 16 years his junior, in 1891. The two soon became lovers. Douglas was the third son of the Marquess of Queensberry, famous for creating the Queensberry Rules of boxing. When Queensberry found out about his son’s relationship, he tried to end it in various ways. At one point he left a card for Wilde, which simply said “For Oscar Wilde, posing sodomite.” This prompted Wilde to prosecute Queensberry for libel. It backfired terribly, and Wilde himself ended up in court on multiple charges of gross indecency. He was found guilty and sentenced to two years hard labor. All this occurred at the height of his fame and success, while The Importance of Being Earnest was still being performed in London. After his conviction, Wilde’s life was never the same.
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Wilde spent his last three years impoverished and in exile in France. Some of his closest friends visited him and stayed with him to the end, as Oscar faded away in a dingy hotel in Paris. He was a broken man, but his wit could not be destroyed. As he lay looking at the surroundings of his cheap hotel room, he uttered some of his final words: “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the other of us has to go.” It was classic Oscar Wilde, and the quote is often listed among the greatest last words ever spoken.
Wilde feared that he had ruined his family name. In his letter “De Profundis,” he wrote: “I had disgraced that name [Wilde] eternally. I had made it a low byword among low people. I had dragged it through the very mire”. But Wilde, on this occasion, was wrong: His name would not be disgraced eternally, although it did take more than a century for an official annulment of his conviction.
In 2017, Wilde was one of some 75,000 gay men in England and Wales pardoned by Queen Elizabeth II. All of these men had been convicted for now-abolished sex offences. This royal pardon is informally known as the Turing Law, named after Alan Turing, the World War II codebreaker who, like Wilde, was convicted for his gay relationships. Turing was officially pardoned in 2013, 61 years later.
Today, Wilde is still remembered for his exuberant lifestyle and infamous imprisonment as much as for his work. Nonetheless, The Picture of Dorian Grayand The Importance of Being Earnest are still considered great literary masterpieces of the late Victorian period, and both display Wilde’s indomitable wit and consummate eye for beauty.
Oct 6
Oct 4
It seems to be a “presidential” week although this post is more about the amazing architecture of the Jefferson Memorial and Monticello, President Jefferson’s beloved home in Virginia, than about the man, Jefferson.
Read moreSep 28
It’s probably no surprise that cucumbers are full of vitamins and minerals, but did you know that among many, many other uses, they can help you polish your shoes?
Read moreSep 7
If any of you have doggies, we have found a great way to keep track of them.
Read moreSep 4
More than 50 years after it premiered on June 30, 1971, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory continues to treat kids and adults alike to a deliciously bizarre viewing experience. Here are a handful of facts you might not know about this candylicious classic.
Read moreAug 31
The two-seater upholstered benches we associate with cozy couples were initially crafted with another duo in mind: a woman and her dress!
Fashionable attire in 18th-century Europe had reached voluminous proportions — panniers (a type of hooped undergarment) were all the rage, creating a wide-hipped silhouette that occasionally required wearers to pass through doors sideways.
Upper-class women with funds to spare on trending styles adopted billowing silhouettes that often caused an exhausting situation: the inability to sit down comfortably (or at all). Ever astute, furniture makers of the period caught on to the need for upsized seats that would allow women with such large gowns a moment of respite during social calls.
As the 1800s rolled around, so did new dress trends.
Women began shedding heavy layers of hoops and skirts for a slimmed-down silhouette that suddenly made small settees spacious. The midsize seats could now fit a conversation companion. When sweethearts began sitting side by side, the bench seats were renamed “love seats,” indicative of how courting couples could sit together for a (relatively) private conversation in public.
The seat’s new use rocketed it to popularity, with some featuring frames that physically divided young paramours. While the small sofas no longer act as upholstered chaperones, love seats are just as popular today — but mostly because they fit well in small homes and apartments.
Here’s to love!
Aug 30
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Aug 22
It’s generally a good idea to keep your distance from lions, which is why it’s reassuring to know that hearing one doesn’t necessarily mean it’s nearby.
Read moreAug 21
This might be one of the most important women you never heard of before.
Read moreAug 15
Ahoy, mateys!
Everyone knows that in addition to making an excellent costume for Halloween, pirates are pretty fun, at least in their Disney-fied state with parrots, rum, jewels, and gold.
However, a lot of the modern stereotypes about pirates just don’t hold water. Here are a few facts about pirates that won’t get you cast out to sea.
Read moreAug 7
The reedy hum of bagpipes calls to mind tartan attire and the loch-filled lands of Scotland, which is why it might be surprising to learn that the wind-powered instruments weren’t created there.
Read moreJul 18
Jul 12
Did you know that generally speaking the shape, size and color of your plate may affect the way you eat or how you enjoy your food?
Read moreJul 7
Asking your nearest and dearest to be in your bridal party is one way of honoring friends and family members, though the task once came with a lot more work than just throwing a couple of showers and a bachelor/bachelorette party.
Read moreJul 3
No one wants bugs of any kind in their home. Especially if you are having guests or when you are celebrating the 4th of July tomorrow. To ensure no spiders or wasps or other bugs are coming in out of the heat try this.
Read moreJun 27
Jun 26
Some personalities are born, while others are cooked up. The latter was the case with Betty Crocker! Can you believe it?!
Read moreJun 20
Milk plays a major part in human life — even for the most dedicated of vegans. Homo sapiens are biologically wired to be raised on our mother’s milk; the substance protects against short- and long-term illnesses while also sharing the mother’s antibodies with the newborn. Milk has also been the backbone of entire empires, and the substance even describes the very galaxy in which our planet resides. Here are seven amazing facts about milk (and its tasty plant-based alternatives) that’ll make you appreciate that carton in your fridge in a whole new way.
Although milk tastes much different than the H2O that comes out of the tap, the beverage is mostly water. Whole milk, for example, I s87% water, and the other 13% contains protein, fat, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals. Because of its high water content, milk is also a good hydration source during hot summer days. For all the talk of different milk types (whole, 2%, or skim), the difference in water content is only 3% at most.
Milk looks white because it’s reflecting all the wavelengths of visible light, and the combination of reflected colors creates white. The particles in milk — including the protein casein, calcium complexes, and fat globules – scatter light, much as light scattering on snow makes it appear white. Sometimes milk can have a slight yellow hue caused by a cow’s diet — the pigment carotene, found in carrots and other vegetables, can cause color variations — and the vitamin riboflavin can also cause a yellowish-green hue. Skim milk, which is low in fat content, can sometimes be a bluish color because casein scatters blue slightly more than red.
Humans stand alone as the only mammals that drink the milk of another mammalian species. This is due to our history of animal husbandry, along with a genetic mutation that allows some humans to retain the enzyme lactase which breaks down milk’s lactose sugar in the digestive system — beyond infancy. However, this mutation is not found in the majority of the 8 billion Homo sapiens on planet Earth — in fact, 68% of us experience some form of lactose malabsorption.
Although humans stand alone when it comes to mammals, some other species do drink milk from other animals. The red-billed oxpecker is known to steal milk from the udders of impala, and shorebirds such as seagulls have similarly swiped milk from the teats of elephant seals.
The horse tribes of the Eurasian Steppes were one of the first cultures to adopt dairying, some 5,000 years ago. Because their vast plains weren’t fertile ground for agriculture, these nomadic tribes instead relied on animals and their milk for sustenance. Because they received much-needed calories from horse’s milk, these tribes could travel across land more quickly and maintain larger empires than their neighbors.
One of the remaining mysteries of milk’s importance in this era of human history is that 95% of Steppe people today lack the gene variant for digesting lactose, yet the population still gains a large portion of their calories from dairy products. One theory is that the microbiome found in the gut of Mongolians has somehow adapted to a millennia-long, dairy-heavy diet.
In 1857, French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur, discovered that microorganisms in the air caused lactic acid fermentation, aka the souring of milk. Pasteur also discovered (after a request from Emperor of France Napoleon III) that certain microbes caused wine to go bad, but by briefly heating the libation to around 140 degrees Fahrenheit, those microbes died off, leaving behind a sterilized (or as it would be later known, “pasteurized”) liquid that would stay fresh for longer.
Pasteurization for milk wasn’t introduced until 1886, but it was a game-changer, as diseases introduced via contaminated milk killed scores of infants in the 19th century. With the introduction of pasteurization, that number dropped significantly.
For years, dairy producers have sued alternative milk companies for using the word “milk” on their packaging — but history is not on their side. Evidence suggests that Romans had a complex understanding of the word “milk,” as the root of the word “lettuce” comes from “lact” (as in “lactate”). Many medieval cookbooks make reference to almond milk, and the earliest mention of soy milk can be found on a Chinese stone slab from around the first to third century CE. However, coconut milk has the longest history; archaeologists have recovered coconut graters among relics from Madagascar and Southeast Asia that date back to around 3000 to 1500 BCE.
The galaxy is home to hundreds of billions of stars, and stretches for truly mind-boggling distances. If you traveled the speed of light, it’d still take you 200,000 years just to cross its entirety. Its Western name — Milky Way — comes from a Greek myth in which the queen goddess Hera, while nursing the hero Heracles, pulled away her breast and sprayed her divine lactation across the cosmos. In fact, the root of the word “galaxy” is the Greek gála, meaning “milk”. The Romans also referred to the cosmos in Latin as Via Lactea, or “Road of Milk.” However, other cultures use different names to represent the great expanse of the starry sky. China, for example, calls it “銀河,” meaning “silver river,” and Sanskrit’s “Mandākinī” roughly means “unhurried.”
Well, what do you know!?
Take it from here, chums!
Jun 15
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