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RELEASE: FEBRUARY 18, 2012
Tim Harper was a campus reporter for the Drake University Times-Delphic in Iowa, when he broke the biggest story of his career on Sept. 17, 1969. Except that none of it was true. That year, Paul McCartney was out of the public eye, as he mulled the …Read more.
RELEASE: FEBRUARY 17, 2012
Henry James proofread the galleys for the 1903 edition of "The Ambassadors," which had been serialized in North American Review. Unfortunately, NAR had edited it down, and James wanted to restore the original version for the book. In the …Read more.
RELEASE: FEBRUARY 16, 2012
British post-punk group Joy Division's music wasn't especially joyful. And the origin of the name is even less so. As the story goes, the Nazis plucked the prettiest women from concentration camps and employed them in brothels for preferred soldiers.…Read more.
RELEASE: FEBRUARY 15, 2012
Before Mickey Mouse — and before he knew much about intellectual property laws — Walt Disney created Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in 1928 for Universal. When he and Universal parted company, Disney lost Oswald, which always rankled the …Read more.
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Monday, March 22There are names for all that clutter filling up your TV screen. Actual, printable names. The station logos are called bugs, which is rather apt, actually. Those annoying animated ads that move across the screen are snipes. They are designed to distract you from the show you are watching and are meant to retaliate for the fact that you now fast forward through all the commercials.
An old Indian pathway, the Wickquasgeck Trail, was renamed Heerestraat by the Dutch. What is it called today? A) Broadway B) Las Vegas Strip C) Magnificent Mile D) Mulholland Drive
Previous answer: Ricky Moody decided not to annoy the trademark lawyers and instead called his book "The Ice Storm."
TRIVIA FANS: Send the trivia questions you've always wanted answered, or original TriviaBits ideas of your own, with your full name and hometown, to Paul Paquet at paul@triviahalloffame.com or visit him online at www.triviahalloffame.com.
Paul Paquet has been writing trivia since the early 1990s, and has written roughly 100,000 questions.
COPYRIGHT 2010 PAUL PAQUET DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM
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