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‘Today I Learned’: 35 Interesting Things People Didn’t Learn At School (New Pics)
Life's a never-ending rollercoaster of education, fun facts, and interesting trivia. And the ride's free if you're willing to stay curious all your life. One of the best places to expand your mind on a daily basis is the ‘Today I Learned' subreddit, boasting over 25.2 million members, over 12 years of service on Reddit, and a community that values curiosity and learning above all else.
We've collected some of the most interesting recent things that the TIL community shared for you to expand your minds with, dear Pandas, so go on and have a look below. And when you're done and if you're thirsting for more knowledge like a true Ravenclaw, you'll find our earlier posts about the TIL subreddit right over here, and here, as well as here.
Separating fact from fiction, however, isn't as easy as it might seem when scrolling through the TIL subreddit. Especially when different authority figures whom we trust say different things. I spoke about learning to separate the truth from falsehoods and how to diplomatically challenge people who might be wrong with Lenore Skenazy, the president of Let Grow and the founder of the Free-Range Kids movement. Read on for her full and in-depth interview with Bored Panda.
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In World War 1, Nobel prize winning physicist Marie Curie developed mobile X-Ray stations to travel to the frontlines and assist army surgeons and preventing amputations when limbs were still intact. It's estimated that over a million wounded soldiers were x-rayed with her units.
Dave Thomas (the founder of Wendy's) was a high-school dropout. He was afraid his success would convince teens to drop out of school, so at age 60, he went back and got his GED.
Icelandic horses are not allowed to leave the country. If they do, they are banned from returning. This is because Iceland is an island so they have limited diseases, and this is another measure to prevent it.
Learning something new and figuring out what's fact, what's fiction, and what's opinion is difficult to do with the flood of information that's easily available to us. However, that same vast store of information that we have access to can be our greatest boon if we learn to swim, dive, and sail through it all.
Finding out that something's actually (not) true even though the beloved authority figures in our lives have been stating differently can fire us up and make us want to confront them. However, if we're not diplomatic and merely want to rub it in their faces that they were wrong, we can end up losing an even greater learning opportunity.
Danny DeVito did the dub for his role as the titular character in The Lorax (2012) in Russian, German, Italian, Catalan, and Castilian Spanish, despite not speaking any of those languages
Dogs and cats circle around before bedding down as a throwback to their wild ancestors. Their survival instincts provoked them to position themselves in the direction of the wind to pick up predator scents and choose the best angle for keeping an eye on the environment.
A Japanese ice cream company created a commercial to publicly apologize about needing to raise the price of their ice cream bars for the first time in 25 years from 60 yen to 70 yen.
Lenore, the president of Let Grow, suggested that instead of being combative and turning opinionated authority figures away from you, people should try to learn something together with them.
“The key is to discover things together. If something sounds strange or unlikely, respond with curiosity—ask the person to tell you more, and how they found this information out, and where you should go if you want to delve into it further,” the expert, who greatly supports childhood independence, suggested.
“Then if the sources they give you seem dubious—well, probably so is whatever they gleaned from them. But if the sources seem legit, read them with an open mind. They may be right after all!” Lenore explained.
Habsburg Emperor Joseph II tried to reform Austria into "ideal Enlightened state". He abolished serfdom, removed restrictions against Jews, gave religious freedom to Protestants and Orthodox and tried to weaken power of Catholic church. But as soon he died all his reforms were abolished
Walt Disney accidentally "kidnapped" Richard Nixon by dispatching his monorail train before the Secret Service could get on. The agents ran after the train and attempted to jump onboard but the doors had already closed. Monorail pilot Bob Gurr was terrified; Nixon got a kick out of it.
Not all people have an internal monologue and people with them typically have stronger mental visuals to accompany their verbal thoughts.
It's a fact of life that nobody is right all the time. And Lenore believes that because of this, it isn't "cruel or crazy" to think that someone else “may have their facts wrong.” However, you shouldn't be getting angry at someone who got something wrong, unless they were deliberately lying to you.
“Ever since the Age of Enlightenment, humans have realized that the best way to get closer to the truth is by saying something out loud and seeing if it stands up to scrutiny. If not—hooray. We are one step closer to the truth because we've just jettisoned a misconception,” Lenore told Bored Panda.
Bill Nye (of Science Guy fame) invented a hydraulic component used on the 747 airliners, and holds three patents for other inventions.
Mel Blanc, the voice of Bugs Bunny and hundreds more, started smoking at the age of 9, changed his last name from Blank to Blanc, survived a car accident resulting in a two week coma, recorded The Flintstones in a full body cast, and died only a year after recording Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
There is a street that is split down the middle by the USA-Canadian border, aptly named Canusa street. People who live in houses on the south side of the street are in the USA, and the north side, in Canada. Crossing the street requires having to report to the border crossing office.
There are ton of that in Europe. Borders are arbitrary (and rarely follow cultural areas)
Indeed, the best ones are between the Netherlands and Belgium, crazy things like a store have two entrence doors, one in Belgium and one in the Netherlands ... into the same store ...
Load More Replies...HAHAHAHAHAHA. We have a lot of those in Europe and you can cross without having to inform anyone.
Imagine you're playing soccer in the yard and the ball goes across the street.
This ball is now property of Canada, please report this accident to the US embassy - we are also sorry for the inconvenience
Load More Replies...Imagine having to swerve out of the way to prevent an accident. "Hold on Greg, they have to check our passports first". Also, on one side they speak with an American accent where the other just asks "Eh?".
That's so weird. What about being in the car and realizing you left your wallet at home? NO UH SIR NO UTURNS, PLEASE CIRCLE THHE BLOCK FOR 10 MINUTES THANK YOU
There is a store here that has the Belgian-Dutch border going straight through it. During covid lockdown, this was challenging because Dutch and Belgian lockdown weren't at the same time. So there was a period of time when half of the actual store was open and the other half was off limits.
imagine yelling to a person on the other side: HI CANADIAN PERSON!!! OH HI AMERICAN PERSON!!!
I see only 1 lane in each direction, so you have to visit another country to drive back :D
Probably only street in the world where you after an accident should ask bystanders to drag you into the other side before calling an ambulance to avoid a financial catastrophe..
An American having a heart attack: honey, bring me across the street before calling an ambulance, I don't want to lose the house. (Then falls to the floor)
there's a part of MN you can only get to by having to cross into Canada
Wait so, hypothetically, someone could just waltz over to the other country? Interesting
Makes going across the street to play with friends just a lil difficult!
Bruh just give everyone honourary citizenship at that point, imagine having to go to the border crossing office just to retrieve a baseball you accidentally threw across the street.
This reminds me of this guy I knew hit a building. He went across the street to a bar and got charged with fleeing the scene because the county line was in the middle of the parking lot. Lol
The Beebee Plain area of the city of Stanstead. The theater and the library are also divided between countries. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canusa_Street
Such things are pretty common in Europe. I used to live in a city where many streets started in France and ended in Belgium.
Is this in the town with the Library that is half in Canada, half in US ?
it like this in arizona and mexico as well- they actually share a city, "Nogales" two completely different worlds on each side
Can you imagine if that were the case in Baarle-Nassau/Baarle-Hertog? People would have to report to the border office just to cross their living room :D ( http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20171210-europes-strange-border-anomaly )
My grandparents lived in Washington DC. Their side of the street was DC and the other side was Maryland.
“If it turns out that you do find some information that contradicts what the other person—your teacher or boss or anyone—has stated as true, again, the best approach is not confrontation. It's assuming that the other person didn't mean to steer you wrong,” she pointed out that instead of being aggressive, we should be approaching the situation in a way that provides the biggest learning opportunity.
Elephants can hear through both their ears and feet. Through special fat pads called digital cushions, they can hear sounds other elephants vocalize below the range of human hearing from many miles away. This helps warn them of far off danger, incoming floods, and rival elephants.
Hall of Fame pitcher Lee Smith didn’t play baseball until he was a junior in high school, only tried out to win a $10 bet, and only started pitching after his team’s star pitcher was killed in a hunting accident. His first start was a no hitter.
Rod Serling, creator of The Twilight Zone, sold the series as a pure entertainment vehicle due to censorship he experienced with previous projects that would delve into controversial social/political issues. The Twilight Zone tackled the same issues but veiled in science fiction and fantasy
“So if you bring in information that contradicts the person, don't say, ‘SEE??? YOU WERE WRONG!' Say something more like, ‘I was so interested in what you were talking about that I did some research and now I'm a little confused. Can we look at this together?'" Lenore advocated going for the diplomatic route rather than seeking out a fight and wanting to prove your own correctness all the time.
ADHD doesn't always mean 'short attention span'. 'Hyperfocusing' on a task for hours on end is also a known symptom of ADHD, where the inability to stop is considered to be the problem.
Attention-deficit and hyperactivity are the symptoms most noticeable to other people.
Disney uses a paint colour called "GO AWAY GREEN" to camouflage and hide objects and doors in their theme parks.
People keep finding meticulously crafted hollow dodecahedrons throughout Europe dating back to the Roman Empire but historians have no idea what they're supposed to be used for as there's no historical record of them anywhere. Theories range from dice to knitting.
“Being accusatory only makes people defensive. So don't be rude, be engaged. This works in the classroom, in the office, and pretty much everywhere,” Lenore, the president of Let Grow, offered us some great advice on what to do if we overhear somebody potentially sharing misinformation.
Every fall, Alaska’s Katmai National Park hosts “Fat Bear Week” and crowns the park’s fattest brown bear. The aim is to highlight the park and wildlife conservation.
Neanderthals, which were traditionally thought of as extremely primitive humans, are now believed to have been extremely intelligent, even comparable to the intelligence of modern humans. They used tools, had social structures, thrived in hostile environments, and lived long lives.
During solar eclipses, tree leaves act as pinhole cameras, resulting in trees casting crescent-shaped shadows on the ground. This effect puzzled Aristotle in the 4th Century BC.
It is insanely cool to see this effect, or the annular version where you see circles of light.
Which of the facts in this list caught your attention the most, dear Pandas? Do you have any interesting bits of trivia that you learned recently to share with us? What, in your opinion, is the best way to separate facts from fake news? Let us know what you think in the comment section. We always love hearing from you!
The plans for Winston Churchill's state funeral had to be revised several times because Churchill outlived several intended pallbearers.
Teeth are only able to experience one sensation, that being pain. When you eat or drink something too hot or too cold, or a dentist operates on your teeth, you will only experience pain because that is the only thing the nerves around your teeth respond to.
The parents of “Simpsons” creator, Matt Groenig, were named Homer & Marge. He also had sisters named Lisa, Maggie, & Patty.
Serotonin, the neurotransmitter responsible for happiness, can be toxic. When injected into skin it causes extreme pain and is a main ingredient of wasp venom
When your immune system fights an infection, it cranks up the mutation rate during antibody production by a factor of 1,000,000, and then has them compete with each other. This natural selection process creates highly specific antibodies for the virus.
I'm quite happy to know, that the mutation rate of my immune system is not at an incredible level without any reason.
the Driftless Area is a rugged area of Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and a minor part of Illinois that was completely missed by glaciers. It is roughly the size of West Virginia, and is home to huge bluffs, deep canyons, and rare species of plants found no where else.
The farmers use square milk cans, because if round ones fall over they keep rolling for miles.
In the 1950's the US airforce tried to design a cockpit to fit the average pilot's body. After measuring 4000 pilots they discovered that none of them came close to having an average body. This lead to introduction of adjustable seats.
Roald Dahl (very tall) mentions the problems he had as WW2 fighter pilot.
During WW2, Ernest Hemingway used his fishing boat named after his ex-wife (Pilar) to hunt German U-boats in the Caribbean armed only with Thomson machine guns and hand grenades. He was given unlimited gasoline by the US government.
That Japan burns a portion of its garbage and uses the resulting ash in land reclamation. As of 2012 Japan has created over 250 square kilometers (96 square miles) of new land using this method.
More about this. If you search on YouTube for: Exploring a Japanese Olympics and paralympics host town (channel name: Life where I am from) and go to time stamp 4.00, you can see how it works and hear it explained (FYI: if you just want to watch that part, it ends at 7.06)
Grasshoppers are older than grass, having evolved roughly 250 million years ago
Tchaikovsky hated to conduct by his own admission. He became obsessed with the fear that his head was going to fall off while he conducted. In 1868, when Tchaikovsky conducted his own Dances of the Hay Maidens, he held his head in place with his left hand while he conducted with his right.
The sauna is such a deeply igrained part of the Finnish culture, that finns will even build them in war. Custom dictates no titles or hierarchies are allowed in the sauna, including military ranks in saunas built and used by soldiers.
I'm curious to hear first-hand accounts of the benefits of saunas.
Saffron, the world's costliest spice by weight, has been cultivated by humans for at least 3500 years and there are no known Saffron plants in the wild. Scientists still disagree about which part of the world the plant orginated. It takes 150,000 flowers to make 1 kg of Saffron spice.
I love the TIL posts, they make me a whole ocean full of random information I can spout out at random times.
I love these! I tell these to random people all the time in the middle of conversations and no one has ever heard them before.
I love the TIL posts, they make me a whole ocean full of random information I can spout out at random times.
I love these! I tell these to random people all the time in the middle of conversations and no one has ever heard them before.