Fun facts!

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Especially since it sounds like a woman could sing that part just as well... but then again, castrates originated in a time where female singers were most likely not a thing, so you'd need high-pitched male singers.
I believe the thing with castratos was that they specifically wanted to have a reliable pool of singers with the voice of a young boy. Back then, they thought it was easier to have a small handful of young male singers chop their balls off before they reached puberty to keep their youthful voice than to have to regularly hire and train little boys to sing and then hire on even more once the older boys hit puberty. It was pretty much a very fucked up way of cutting costs from what I’ve read.
 
Patton himself was probably insane, constantly going over events that he believed he lived out in his many past lives, including a Spartan at Thermopylae, one of Caesar's legionnaires, a Viking warrior at Stamford Bridge, an English Longbowman at Agincourt, a Scottish Highlander who died at Culloden in 1745, and a Napoleon's marshall Joachim Murat.
Patton WAS insane. After Germany surrendered, Patton wanted to take the western allies and what was left of the German army and attack the Soviet Union. He wanted to kick this off with dropping an atomic bomb on Moscow. Truman said something to the effect of "that boy ain't right" and denied permission. This scenario is included in the computer strategy game Hearts of Iron II as one of the campaigns. I haven't played any of the later versions so I don't know if it's included there.
 
Patton WAS insane. After Germany surrendered, Patton wanted to take the western allies and what was left of the German army and attack the Soviet Union. He wanted to kick this off with dropping an atomic bomb on Moscow. Truman said something to the effect of "that boy ain't right" and denied permission. This scenario is included in the computer strategy game Hearts of Iron II as one of the campaigns. I haven't played any of the later versions so I don't know if it's included there.

Between the pistol-whipping shellshocked soldiers, forcing his soldiers to wear neckties in combat, and having the US Army's biggest ego since George Armstrong Custer, Patton was definitely a historical lolcow.
 
The plastic tips in the end of shoe laces are called aglets.

Their true purpose is sinister.

In June of 1965, a 456 pound Scottish man named Angus Barbieri started a medically supervised fast, drinking only water, seltzer, tea, and black coffee and eating only vitamins and electrolyte supplements. In July of 1966, after 382 days of fasting and a loss of 276 pounds, he ended the fast at 180 pounds.
 
There’s an abandoned mining town in Japan called The Matsuo Ghost Mine that was originally built to house miners and their families, that’s been abandoned since the 70’s. Now that in and of itself isn’t particularly unsettling, but what makes this town special is the fact that it’s perpetually covered in an extremely thick fog. People who have actually tried to visit the area have claimed that the mist is so thick that it can take days to find the town despite it sitting on a relatively open area, and it’s said that you can see humanoid outlines of various sizes moving about in the fog and the sounds of wet footsteps and sorrowful voices echo around the area.
 
There also exists a near abandoned town called Wittenoom in Australia, the town was developed around a blue asbestos mine and has slowly had it's population decrease as the diseases from the asbestos have become apparent.
3 people still live there, and the government wants to remove the town, with roads leading to the town being blocked off, it's power grid and status as a town being removed, and even signs mentioning the town removing any mention of it.
 
Patton WAS insane. After Germany surrendered, Patton wanted to take the western allies and what was left of the German army and attack the Soviet Union. He wanted to kick this off with dropping an atomic bomb on Moscow. Truman said something to the effect of "that boy ain't right" and denied permission. This scenario is included in the computer strategy game Hearts of Iron II as one of the campaigns. I haven't played any of the later versions so I don't know if it's included there.
He wasn't wrong though, kicking the commies while their pants were down would of saved us a lot of trouble down the road.

Their true purpose is sinister.
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The 3DO was supposed to have a second console, the M2, but it never happened. However, Konami used it for a few arcade games in the late 90s like Evil Night (House of the Dead clone but a bit creepier), Total Vice (Virtua Cop clone), Battle Tryst (Fighting game), Polystars (Shmup).

For the longest time, because it was so rare, the only footage of Total Vice on the internet was from a movie called Showtime starring Eddy Murphy because he was playing the game in the beginning of the film.

None of the roms have been dumped because people are afraid to break the system (the system is fragile as hell) and it's really hard to find anything for it.

 
Not so fun fact: There's a ghost town in Pennsylvania named Centralia that has had a fire burning underneath it since 1962.

It used to have a decent coal mining thing going on until a good number of the companies that operated the mines shut down, and then the city council had one of the mines repurposed as a landfill to dissuade illegal dumping. Regulations at the time required strip-mine landfills to undergo inspection, and someone had informed a councilman that the mine be lined with an incombustible material, as fires in these kinds of landfills were not uncommon and would cause significant damage.

Later that year 'round Memorial Day, they decided to clean it out, and it's suggested that the council had volunteer firemen light fire to it. By night, they had doused any visible flames, but two days later they doused them again. A week later, they had to do it again. Eventually a bulldozer was brought in to shift around the garbage so they could douse concealed layers of the waste that was on fire.

A few days later, a hole 15 feet wide and several feet tall was found behind a wall of waste that was not covered by the incombustible material, and it's thought that this led to a labyrinth of other strip-mines which were still full of coal. By July, the smell of burning trash and coal could be smelled from the town church.

Smoke leaked from fissures near the landfill, and first attempts to clear out the burning coal were unsuccessful. Eventually someone sent a formal notice of the fire to the local coal authorities, and the city council decided to withhold the reason of the fire as they thought they would not get any aid if it was found out they set fire to a landfill (which was prohibited likely due to this very reason). By August, carbon monoxide levels from the fire reached lethal amounts, and all mining operations, period, stopped.

The initial company that was to clear out the fire (got the job via contract) was restricted from doing any exploratory mining to see how big the fire actually was by the Department of Mining and Mineral Industries and instructed them to work according to specifications drawn up by engineers who had no idea how big or active the fire was and only went off estimations. Intentional breaching of an underground mine inadvertently allowed large amounts of fresh, oxygen laden air in, further exasperating the fire. Eventually the fire traveled far enough into the mine where it caught a large seam of coal, and by October the company that was supposed to take care of it ran out of money.

A second contract to clear out the fire was approved shortly before the first contract ran out of money, which was also a disaster. They were supposed to flood the mines ahead of the fire with a slurry of crushed rock and water, but things quickly turned south and the region experienced a heavy period of snowfall and bizarrely low temperatures, causing the water lines to freeze, and a freak blizzard caused the rock crushing machine to freeze as well. This project also ran out of money, and partially drilled boreholes allowed the fire to spread further, and causing the fire to have spread 700 feet from it's origin by April. The temperature is around 190f, or 90c.

By the 80's it started taking it's toll on the residents of Centralia. People were exibiting signs of carbon monoxide and dioxide poisoning. A child even fell into a sinkhole in his backyard caused by the fires. The government swooped in in '84 with $42m in relocation money, and in '92 the governor hit the town with eminent domain so the town could be demolished. The fire traveled far enough to affect a nearby town, which in '96 had it's last home torn down.

Now, only 7 people still live in Centralia, and not for a lack of trying. In 2009, the governor began the formal evictions of the remaining residents, and in '12 the residents lost their last appeal against the eminent domain notices. A settlement was reached in which they were allowed to spend the rest of their lives there, but upon their deaths their property would be seized.

There's a funny image of a home that used to be a duplex that was split due to only one half being inhabited, and they put up buttresses to support the house. There's actually two of them!
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A370,_Centralia,_Pennsylvania,_USA,_solitary_house,_2008.JPG

Oh, yeah, and current estimations say the fire will burn for at least another two hundred and fifty years.

Actual fun fact: the town's founder was killed by a bunch of micks called the Molly Maguires.
 
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Some exhibits at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago included a statue of a knight on horseback made out of prunes, a life-sized sculpture of Christopher Columbus made out of chocolate, and a map of the United States made out of pickles. Also, one of the laborers who helped build the fair was a carpenter from Indiana named Elias Disney, who went home and told his family about the otherworldly magical kingdom he helped create, including his young son Walt.
 
Let it Be, the Final Beatles film, is finally getting re-released for the first time since 1980. It's also coming with a new version directed by Peter Jackson. Both are slated for release later this year
 
SEGA is a lolcow company so they decided that launching games requiring the Sega 32x and Sega CD combined would be an amazing idea. 6 games in total for the peripheral combo were released.

"Surgical Strike" was one of them, but it's impossible to find. It was release exclusively in Brazil of all places and no one has a fucking copy nowadays. The ROM has never been dumped because of that.

It's a shitty game though (there's another version of this garbage) so nobody cares.

"With this official confirmation at hand, it is safe to say that, with approximately 500 units sold world wide, the 32X CD port of Surgical Strike did indeed find an official release, but it surely is a rare beast. Hunting down a copy of the game may be an insurmountable task"

Sauce
 
When the play Ubu Roi first preimered in France it actually caused riots because of its vulgarity and obscenity, making its premiere it's one and only showing on stage.
 
Grizzly bears are somewhat bulletproof. Their thick skin, fat, and dense muscles are actually tough enough that bullets from low caliber guns can’t punch through them.
 
Fun fact: The song Brains! from the Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy never had an instrumental released on CD...
But it did get released on DVD, as it was used as the episode select music on the second disc of the first season release. Episode selects usually last a little over 10 seconds, but it lasts over five minutes to accommodate the song.
as far as I'm aware I'm the first person to record it, as menus are unrippable
 
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