Why Are You Not Supposed to Use Twice Boiled Water for Tea?

Jeremy W. asks: Is it true that drinking tea made from twice boiled water is bad for you? There’s a rather persistent idea that “reboiling” water (i.e. boiling water two or more times and allowing it to cool in-between) while making a cup of tea is potentially harmful to your health, with some going so far as stating that regularly […]

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Weekly Wrap Volume 103

This is a weekly wrap of our popular Daily Knowledge Newsletter. You can get that newsletter for free here. THE SURPRISINGLY RECENT TIME TESTS USING RABBITS AND FROGS WERE THE GOLD STANDARD TO ACCURATELY DETECT HUMAN PREGNANCY We live in an age where determining if a woman is pregnant is ridiculously simple and cheap. Go back a few decades, though, […]

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The Not-So-Holy Order of the Friars of St. Francis of Wycombe

Established in West Wycombe by Sir Francis Dashwood in 1749, the Brotherhood of St. Francis of Wycombe was anything but saintly. Devoted to wicked fun and debauchery, for the next two decades, many notable individuals in England counted themselves members, such as the 4th Earl of Sandwich, John Montagu, Baron George Dodington, member of Parliament Thomas Potter, and, while not […]

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A Harrier Jet, Pepsi, and John Leonard

Back in the halcyon days of 1995, Pepsi launched their aptly titled “Drink Pepsi, Get Stuff” campaign that allowed customers to earn points on every Pepsi product they bought and then exchange them for things like Pepsi branded t-shirts and hats. The promotion was a roaring success and resulted in nothing of note happening whatsoever… unless of course you count […]

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Why Helicopters are Quite Safe When the Engine Dies, The Founder of Hershey’s and the Titanic, Are Some People Really Born With Tails and More…

In this week’s “best of” our YouTube channel, we share 10 amazing facts, then discuss why helicopters are actually pretty safe when the engine dies, the few families that have owned most of England for the last 1,000 years, how the calorie content of food is determined, the story behind the VIP ticket the founder of Hershey’s booked on the […]

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Life in a Jar- Sendler’s List

The following is an article from Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader One amazing woman in Poland—and four teens in Kansas who tracked her down and told her story. SENDLER’S LIST In 1999 a teacher at Uniontown High School in Kansas encouraged four students to do a project for a national History Day contest. Norm Conard told his 9th-grade students—Elizabeth Cambers, Megan […]

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The Surprisingly Recent Time Tests Using Rabbits and Frogs Were the Gold Standard to Accurately Detect Human Pregnancy

We live in an age where determining if a woman is pregnant is ridiculously simple and cheap. Go back a few decades, though, and the latest and greatest technology for determining whether a woman was with child involved a syringe full of urine and little animals. Yes, as bizarre as it’s going to sound, you really can use things like […]

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Weekly Wrap Volume 102

This is a weekly wrap of our popular Daily Knowledge Newsletter. You can get that newsletter for free here. The Life of Larry the Cat- Cheif Mouser to tbe Cabinet Office of the UK A while ago we shared the story of F.D.C. Willard, an ordinary housecat who through a confluence of mistakes and errors, ended up being listed as […]

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The First Thing Eaten on the Moon, What Armstrong Said Directly After His Historic “Small Step” Line, What It Would Take to Stop the Earth Orbiting the Sun and More in Yet Another 14 Quick Facts

983) On July 21, 1969 at 02:56 UTC, Neil Armstrong forever stamped his name in the history books by putting his foot on the Moon. Armstrong getting to do this almost never happened due to the fact that he turned his application in to NASA about a week after the June 1, 1962 deadline, making him ineligible for that historic […]

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Is Spider Blood Really Blue, The Origins of the Necktie, The Nazi Super Cannon and More

In this week’s “best of” our YouTube channel, we discuss whether or not spider blood is really blue, the origins of the necktie, the differences between virgin, extra-virgin, and “normal” olive oil, the Nazi Super Cannon, the truth about double jeopardy, and what the hottest temperature possible is. Click here to subscribe to our YouTube Channel for many more videos […]

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From Sorcerer to Clergyman to Pirate to Admiral, the Remarkable Life of Eustace The Monk

At the turn of the 13th century, Eustace Busket fought, raided, killed, embezzled, betrayed, revenged, impersonated and prayed his way across France, Spain and England. Although better known as Eustace the Monk, this younger son of a county lord spent little time in a monastery, choosing instead to live the life of a steward, mercenary and pirate. Born in 1170 […]

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The Life of Larry the Cat- Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office of the United Kingdom

A while ago we shared the story of F.D.C. Willard, an ordinary housecat who through a confluence of mistakes and errors, ended up being listed as the co-author of a widely cited science paper on low temperature physics. Today we’re telling a similar story about an equally impressive Tabby called Larry who is, believe it or not, an official employee […]

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The DC Comics Character Who Gained His Powers from Cocaine

Comics are littered with weird and obscure heroes and villains with powers that range from the mundane to the ridiculous, but there’s one character that ranks among the most “interesting” ever conceived- Snowflame, a villain with powers that were intrinsically linked to the character taking copious amounts of cocaine. As the character himself explained in the comic, “I am Snowflame, […]

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Weekly Wrap Volume 101

This is a weekly wrap of our popular Daily Knowledge Newsletter. You can get that newsletter for free here. Why Do Books’ Copyright Pages Have 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10? The number line, or printer’s key, often seen on the copyright page of books is simply a method of record-keeping that helps identify the book’s […]

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