FASCINATING TRIVIA
POP QUIZ
1. VERMILION IS WHAT SHADE OF COLOR?
a) Blue
b) Green
c) Red
d) Yellow
2. WHICH VARIETY OF CHEESE ACCOUNTS FOR THE BIGGEST PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL PRODUCTION BY U.S. CHEESEMAKERS?
a) Cheddar
b) Cream cheese
c) Mozzarella
d) Swiss
3. TRADITIONALLY, A TIN ROOF SUNDAE IS MADE WITH VANILLA ICE CREAM, WARM CHOCOLATE SAUCE AND WHAT OTHER INGREDIENT?
a) Butterscotch
b) Chocolate chips
c) Peppermint sticks
d) Salted Peanuts
QUICK QUESTION
WHAT’S THE FUNNIEST ACTUAL NAME YOU’VE
HEARD OF SOMEONE HAVING?
POP QUIZ ANSWERS
- Vermilion is a shade of red.
- U.S. cheesemakers produce more mozzerella than any other cheese varieties.
- A classic tin roof sundae contains lightly salted peanuts.
~ COPYRIGHT 2025 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM
TO ME THERE IS NO PICTURE SO BEAUTIFUL
AS SMILING, BRIGHT EYED HAPPY CHILDREN,
NO MUSIC SO SWEET AS THEIR CLEAR
AND RINGING LAUGHTER.
~ P.T. BARNUM ~
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
BE ABLE TO LAUGH AT YOURSELF
RIDDLE ME THIS
WHAT RUNS BUT NEVER WALKS,
MURMERS BUT NEVER TALKS,
HAS A BED BUT NEVER SLEEPS,
AND HAS A MOUTH BUT NEVER EATS?
RIDDLE ANSWER
A RIVER
LOST IN SUBURBIA
A SUPER DOG DAY AFTERNOON
BY TRACY BECKERMAN
Being the deep, substantial person that I am, I was kind of hoping that following my knee replacement surgery, my at-home physical therapist would resemble someone like Jason Momoa. Unfortunately, it seemed all the buff therapists had already been assigned, because I ended up with the one who looked more like Ant-Man than Aquaman.
Still, I didn’t want him to feel like I didn’t respect his special skillset, so I asked him what his superpower was.
“I will help you get your leg straight,” he replied.
I sighed. I had been hoping for something more like, “I can manipulate time to save the world from a mutant alien arachnid species,” but I thought getting my leg straight would be great too.
In most superhero movies, there is often a villain whom the superhero must thwart to save humanity. But in my house, the only one who really fit that role was the dog. Ever since I had returned home from the hospital, I had noticed that the dog would lie across the floor or leave a toy exactly in my path, setting up a treacherous obstacle for a woman with only one good leg. Although, I don’t think it was his intention to hurt me, the net result would have been the same, and thus I dubbed the villainous dog “He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Tripped-Over.”
The physical therapist, who I’ll call Therapyman (because all superheroes should have “man” in their name, and also I’m not very creative when it comes to naming superheroes), realized that the dog would become our nemesis. It might have had something to do with the fact that Therapyman himself had tripped over the dog on his way into my house. This is also when we realized that Therapyman could fly … but only short distances and not landing very well.
Now, I’ve had interactions with superheroes in the past, so all this was nothing new to me. For many years, my husband went by the pseudonym Super Grillman. When the burgers came out, he transformed into his alias and would go off to fight his barbecue battles with his galactic grill tools, which he kept in a titanium grill case. He didn’t so much save the world from burgers as he did save the burgers from becoming well done. But he was proud of his achievements, and who was I, a mere mortal, to question his status?
This would be a good time to admit that the hospital had sent me home with pain medication for the first week, and it was making me loopy. This may be the reason I called my physical therapist “Therapyman” to his face. I introduced myself as “Super Knee Woman” (again, not very creative, but I was on meds, so I get a pass), who could leap off my bed in a single bound. When he tested my other skills, I failed with flying colors, which I attributed to the fact that I believed his PT bag contained Kryptonite, and therefore I was rendered practically mortal.
Therapyman was super kind, though, assuring me that it was normal to lose your superpowers after a big surgery and that I would be back to saving the world, or at least be able to get to the toilet by myself, in no time.
As Therapyman began to run me through a series of exercises, both of us neglected to see the villainous dog, “He-Who-Shall-Not Be-Tripped-Over,” lying down in the hall, directly in my path. I was teetering precariously, my cane just about to come in contact with the dog’s tail, when Therapyman flew into action, dashed across the hall at superspeed and, with superhuman strength, lobbed my dog across the hall like a hockey puck.
This is when I realized the physical therapist’s true superpower name was “He-Who-Moves-the-Dog-Out-Of-My-Way.”
~Tracy Beckerman is the author of the Amazon Bestseller, “Barking at the Moon: A story of Life, Love, and Kibble.
COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM.
Fascinating Stuff
FASCINATING STUFF
In the 16th century, it was fashionable for for women to whiten their skin using a compound of white lead known as Venetian ceruse. Made from the white residue produced by soaking metallic white lead in vinegar, the white lead was also used by painters. The problem was that white lead is toxic, and it poisoned a lot of women, quite possibly including Queen Elizabeth 1 of England, whose face was usually caked with the stuff.
When he was a boy, John Lennon was reprimanded regularly for chewing gum in school. Eventually, he finished with school, but not with gum. Watch videos of his performances with the Beatles and you’ll spot him chewing between verses of a song. The most obvious instance is the 1967 BBC broadcast of “All You Need Is Love,” but there are others. In some early Beatles footage, you’ll catch Ringo Starr playing the drums and chewing, too.
Only a fraction of the milk used to make cheese winds up in a finished wedge. The rest — as much as 90% — becomes a liquid byproduct called whey. Dumping that whey into rivers and lakes would throw off their natural chemical balance. So savvy cheesemakers in Canada, France, the U.K. and the U.S. feed it into mechanical “digesters” that convert whey into methane biogas used to power the cheesemaking facilities themselves and sometimes the villages where they’re located.
Napoleon’s 1812 invasion of Russia supposedly was thwarted by the bitter cold. Russian winter, which turned the tin buttons on his soldiers’ uniforms to dust. Chemistry teachers love that story, because nothing illustrates an element undergoing physical change quite like the image of freezing soldiers with their pants falling down. Tin darkens and turns powdery at low temperatures. Did that contribute to Napoleon marching in with 600,000 men and retreating with only about 30,000 left alive? Unlikely.
~ COPYRIGHT 2025 LESLIE ELMAN
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM
I am so in the mood for a circus! Those wonderful posters brought back fond memories of music, performances, food- hours of fun and bright colors! And who can forget the animals and acrobats. Great fun and happy memories.
Happy start to the day!!!
‘Tis a walk down childhood memory lane with all the great circus posters.
Giggles and Happiness
Daymaker, I loved the fantastic circus ART and quote today from PT Barnum: “TO ME THERE IS NO PICTURE SO BEAUTIFUL AS SMILING, BRIGHT EYED HAPPY CHILDREN, NO MUSIC SO SWEET AS THEIR CLEAR AND RINGING LAUGHTER.” I was one of those children that Mr. Barnum was focused on with “ringing laughter. My parents took us 6 kids to every “circus in town” event. Would you believe, I continue to get a healing inside of me even to this day. Now that’s circus magic that lives on.
Totally agree Marty!
What a great flashback of childhood circus memories.
So delighted you enjoyed.
We appreciate ya.
Always love the trivia!
I love the trivia – makes me feel (because I am) smarter than before I read Leslie’s gems of interestings!
Thanks so much for your time in being a Daymaker supporter.
Valuable
❤️ todays blog always so great👍🏻