Fun facts!

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This one may not be very fun but...


The original voice actor for gepetto was openly a Nazi sympathizer and even bragged to the animators how he admired how Adolf Hitler had turned Germany around and was annexing courty after country to the Reich.
 
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Fallout 1 was originally supposed to use Steve Jackson Games' GURPS rules but the deal fell through so it used its own system.
 
Walt Disneys last words are believed to be "Kurt Russel" who was only a child actor who had a few minor roles in Disney productions at the time of his death.


No one knows what Albert Einstein's last words were because he spoke them in German to the nurse on duty who didn't speak the language.
 
Fallout 1 was originally supposed to use Steve Jackson Games' GURPS rules but the deal fell through so it used its own system.
This is also what led to the creation of the S.P.E.C.I.A.L system the game uses, which is basically inspired by GURPS.

Really, it's amazing the game's mechanics work as well as they do given that the developers were using GURPS until late into development and they had to make their own version.
 
The Baker's Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is an organism that can literally change its sex (or, more properly, its mating type) by altering its DNA. The two mating types of the yeast is determined by its MAT locus, but, in addition, the yeast harbors archived, inactive copies of MAT genes of both mating types in regions known as HML and HMR. When it comes to gender reassignment, the yeast cuts out its MAT locus with an enzyme, and copy either of the archived MAT genes in its place. In 90% of the operations the mating type is changed.

For details look at this rather arcane paper.
 
The earliest known instance of "fan fiction" is the case of several Sherlock Holmes books that were not published by the creator Arthur Conan Doyle, but rather several avid readers who used his name and wanted more stories out of the character despite Doyle having"retired" him. This lead to some of the first copyright laws to be put in place, loosely based on the previously developed patent system.
 
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Willem Dafoe had a "stunt cock" for his role in Antichrist because his own was described as comically large.

iirc, a prosthetic/makeup artist on the set of eXistenZ started the rumor, having noticed it while working on Dafoe, and leaked the news to J.J. Leigh (or Jude Law, I can't remember).
 
iirc, a prosthetic/makeup artist on the set of eXistenZ started the rumor, having noticed it while working on Dafoe, and leaked the news to J.J. Leigh (or Jude Law, I can't remember).
I ran across an interview with Lars Von Trier who stated that he was shocked at Dafoe's size. He also mentioned that during that scene people were more confused than scared during the test screenings when his penis showed up.
 
Iain Banks, author of The Wasp Factory was an extra in Monty Python and the Holy Grail when he was in his early 20s. You can catch him near the very end of the movie when Arthur is preparing to storm the castle occupied by the French.
 
Iain Banks, author of The Wasp Factory was an extra in Monty Python and the Holy Grail when he was in his early 20s. You can catch him near the very end of the movie when Arthur is preparing to storm the castle occupied by the French.

The final novel of Iain Banks, The Quarry, involves an autist and his father, a bitter man who is dying of cancer. As he was finishing the novel, he found out he had terminal cancer himself and died shortly before its publication.
 
Considering today is December 7th, I'll talk about why Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and why it pretty much signaled that Japan would lose the war with the US before it really even started.

So why attack the U.S. in 1941 when everyone knew that the US had an industrial output 10 times that of Japan? Well the Japanese had a lot of assumptions in their heads when thinking about war with the US. The first one being that war was inevitable between the Japanese and the United States considering the imperialistic conquering they had been doing around the Philippines (A US held territory). Another was that the longer the Japanese waited, the less they would be capable of waging war and the more capable the US would be at waging war. Due to this it made sense to strike as soon as possible because the Japanese navy was at its peak in 1941, the US oil embargo meant they didnt have long until they ran out of oil, and that as of 1941 Japanese naval tonnage was at a competitive percentage to the US. Another assumption was that a drawn out war with the United States would be almost impossible for the Japanese to win considering that everyone in the IJN and IJA knew that there was no way Japan could compete with American industry and their vast resources. The last assumption being that the only way to win this war would be through a strong defense and the sheer superiority of the Japanese race and spirit. The Japanese wanted to seize all territory in the south and central Pacific and fortify it, so that an American offensive through these fortified holdings would be so difficult and costly for the Americans that the loss of life would outweigh victory. They knew the US would win eventually but wanted to break the spirit of the American people and pull out of the war. This mainly comes from the Japanese thinking the US was filled with a bunch of greedy pacifists only concerned with material wealth and they would be scared of Japan, a nation of hardy warriors.

So all this thinking leads to the decision to attack Pearl Harbor and engage in all out war with the United States. The goal of Pearl Harbor and the subsequent invasions of the Philippines, Burma, and other European colonial holdings is to expel these foreign influences, make the world recognize Japan's Empire and delay US naval forces. With specific regards to Pearl Harbor, Marshal Admiral of the IJN Yamamoto wants pretty much one thing, to delay the US Pacific Fleet for at least 6 months so that Japan can conquer without fear in Southeast Asia.

So why does Pearl Harbor pretty much spell the end for the Japanese? Well, before the attack Japanese recon and intelligence reported that there were 3 aircraft carriers at Pearl Harbor plus the other ships that were there as well. The aircraft carriers however were not there on the morning of the attack and thus were not able to be damaged. This is significant because as both sides will find out in the coming months the most powerful weapon on the naval battlefield is the aircraft and thus aircraft carriers are a huge force multiplier. Also during the attack Japanese air forces were instructed not to hit the dry docks, only the ships. This was a pretty stupid decision considering the ships they only damaged could easily be repaired right after in the untouched dry docks. Lastly and probably most significant was that this sneak attack would pretty much put the entire American population into a yearning for Japanese blood. No matter how much pacifism or isolationism the American population and Congress wanted it was all out the window now and the only thing the nation wanted was complete unconditional surrender.

This would come back to bite the Japanese in the ass where those missed carriers, those easily repaired ships, and the now legit racial hatred the Americans had for the Japanese would come back to reek irreplaceable damage on the Imperial Japanese Navy at the Battle of Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway. Midway being of particular importance considering it is really the end of any hopes of military success the Japanese might have.
 
The twelve days of Christmas originally referred to December 25th to January 5th, not December 14th to 25th. The practice is all but forgotten by most Christians in the west save for Lutheran, Catholic and Orthodox Churches. Thought January 5th is still considered Christmas day in Russia.... speaking off which when the Communist party took over in 1917 one of the first State orders was the removal of all symbols of Christmas and the outlawing of the holiday, including outlawing depictions of St. Nicholas as a symbol of religion. Though people got around the bans by calling Christmas trees "New year's trees." And St Nicholas became Santa Claus and wasn't a saint, he was a folk elf.


Still wanna vote for Bernie and AOC next November kids?
 
He's an elf in that night before Christmas pome.
I know it's just whenever the kgb came to the door asking why the children drew the man in the red suit at school that day, their parents had to say he's an elf or a magic man of some sort but not at all related to the miracle baby that was born 1920 years prior in Bethlehem. Less they be hauled off to the Gulags


Edit reminds me of this
 
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Michael Douglas was supposed to be in a big film in 1995 and initially agree under two conditions; filming had to start immediately because he was available only for a limited time, and his character had to have the same amount of screen time as Genna Davis. Douglas eventually pulled out, claiming that Davis's role was expanded at his character's expense.

Fortunately for Douglas, the movie he dropped out of was Cutthroat Island, the movie that bombed so hard it killed the pirate movie genre until Disney revived it in 2003 with Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, killed everyone’s career (except for distributor MGM and composer John Debney, whose score was praised), and cucked Carolco Pictures so hard, it went bankrupt.
 
The Simpsons movie and brother bear are the only animated movies to start in 1:33 aspect ratio and then switch to 2;34 and 1:85 at one point for the remaining run-time a trick only one other live action film has ever used.


Three episodes of the Simpsons are recycled from failed ideas to make a Simpsons movie. Kamp Krusty, a fish called Selma and bonfire of the Manatees.

The last of his films Walt Disney lived to see theatrically released is 1963's the sword in the Stone, he died half way through the production of the jungle book.
 
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These 2 men are Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, 2 of Disney's oldest chief animators who got their start with the company in 1934 and continued working for Disney until their retirement in the 1970s. However, even after their retirement the duo would occasionally appear in certain animated features as voiced cameos including an appearance in the (horribly underrated) 1999 film The Iron Giant and the 2004 film The Incredibles (both pictured below).
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Both men have since passed away, Frank in 2004 at the age of 92 and Ollie in 2008 at the age of 95.
 
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