Cities with the most billionaires:
- New York: 35
- Los Angeles: 24
- Moscow: 20
- San Francisco: 20
- London: 19
- Hong Kong: 18
- Chicago: 12
- Paris: 12
- Dallas: 11
- Tokyo: 11
Cities with the most billionaires:
If you take the text of Genesis 26:5-10 and break it into lines of 33 characters each, the words Bible and code appear, word-search-style, in the resulting grid.
That looks pretty nifty, but in fact you can find almost anything in a long text if you look hard enough. Using the same technique in 1997, Australian mathematician Brendan McKay found that Moby Dick had predicted the assassination of Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, including the assassin’s first and last names, the university he attended, and even the motive (“Oslo,” referring to the Oslo accords). That Melville — what a genius.
2646798 = 21 + 62 + 43 + 64 + 75 + 96 + 87
Uninspired last words:
On his deathbed Stan Laurel said, “I wish I were skiing.” His nurse said, “Oh, Mr. Laurel, do you ski?” Laurel replied, “No, but I’d rather be skiing than doing what I’m doing.”
More here.
The most frequently used letters of the English alphabet, in order, are ETAOIN SHRDLU.
They can be rearranged to spell SOUTH IRELAND.
griffade
sudden seizure with the claws
“I have never been hurt by anything I didn’t say.” — Calvin Coolidge, known as “Silent Cal”
In 1964, grad student Donald Currey cut down a bristlecone pine in eastern Nevada to see how old it was.
It was 4,844 years old. He had killed the oldest thing in the world.
Bonus sad noble tree story here.
In Brazil, the Hamburglar is known as Papaburguer.
Long song titles: