Sunday, April 30, 2023

From The Book Of Useless Information—part 1 of 3

While looking for something in one of my bookcases, I came across a book I had forgotten about…a book I purchased several years ago—The Book Of Useless Information, an official publication of The Useless Information Society.  It has a 2006 copyright date which means some of this information could possibly no longer be current.

I'm a long time (as well as big time) trivia fan.  In fact, I've done several blogs over the years about trivia.  I immediately became distracted and started randomly flipping through the book.  Half an hour later I was still standing in front of the bookcase thumbing through the pages.

I decided to share some of this useless information with you.  The contents of the book are broken down into thirteen categories which I'm going to break up into three blogs, this week and continuing over the next two weeks.  I'll share a few items from each category.

I did discover one error while thumbing through the pages.  I think it could more accurately be called an oversight, a typo that was missed during the editing/proof reading process, rather than an actual error in research.  I'll share that with you at the end of the third of this series of trivia blogs.

HALL OF FAME:  Thomas Jefferson anonymously submitted design plans for the White House, they were rejected.  Andrew Jackson was the only president to believe that the world is flat.  James Garfield could write Latin with one hand and Greek with the other—simultaneously.  Gerald Ford was once a male model.  Al Capone's business card said he was a used furniture dealer.  Adolph Hitler was Time magazine's Man Of The Year in 1938 (keep in mind that Time magazine awards that position to the person they feel has had the most impact on the news which is not the same thing as someone to be admired).  The shortest British monarch was Charles I, who was four-feet nine-inches tall.  When young and impoverished, Pablo Picasso kept warm by burning his own paintings.  Christopher Columbus had blond hair.

THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT:  Tom Hanks is related to Abraham Lincoln.  Tommy Lee Jones and Vice President Al Gore were freshmen roommates at Harvard.  Elizabeth Taylor appeared on the cover of Life magazine more than anyone else.  Charlie Chaplin once won third prize in a Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest.  In high school, Robin Williams was voted the least likely to succeed.  Mick Jagger attended the London School of Economics for two years.  Parker Brothers prints about $50 billion worth of Monopoly money in a year, more than the real money issued annually by the U.S. Government.  Kermit the Frog is left-handed.  Peanuts is the world's most read comic strip.  Mel Blanc, the voice of Bugs Bunny, was allergic to carrots.  Alfred Hitchcock never won an Academy Award for directing.

THE LITERARY WORLD:  During his entire lifetime, Herman Melville's classic Moby Dick sold only fifty copies.  Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at the age of nineteen.  Tom Sawyer was the first novel written on a typewriter.  Arthur Conan Doyle never had Sherlock Holmes say "Elementary, my dear Watson." The word cop came from the English term Constable On Patrol.  The most used letter in the English language is E with Q being the least used.  The oldest word in the English language is town.  The only fifteen letter word that can be spelled without repeating a letter is uncopyrightable.  Bookkeeper is the only word in the English language with three consecutive double letters.  In England in the 1880s, pants was considered a dirty word.  Polish is the only word in the English language that, when capitalized, is changed from a noun or a verb to a nationality.

ON THE MENU:  On average, there are 178 sesame seeds on each McDonald's Big Mac bun.  Coca-Cola was originally green.  A full seven percent of the Irish barley crop goes to the production of Guinness beer.  The first man to distill bourbon whiskey was a Baptist preacher in 1789.  Almonds are a member of the peach family.  You use more calories eating celery than there are in celery itself.  The oldest known vegetable is the pea.  Tomatoes and cucumbers are fruits.  There is no such thing as blue food, even blueberries are purple.  The only food that does not spoil is honey.

This is only a small sampling of the first four sections of the book.  Anyone have any interesting trivia bits that fall within these four categories?

Next week I'll continue with some samples from the second group of four sections.  And the week after that I'll do the final five sections and disclose the error I found.

Sunday, April 23, 2023

CANADIAN CRAVINGS/Passport To Pleasure series—character interview

This week, from CANADIAN CRAVINGS/Passport To Pleasure series published by The Wild Rose Press www.thewildrosepress.com I'm welcoming Addie Burton and Knox Mallory to my blog.

Addie is a photojournalist with a major international travel magazine. Knox is the owner of Mallory Excursions, a train travel and vacation business started by his grandfather. Knox inherited the  Canadian corporation, headquartered in Vancouver, from his father about ten years ago and has continued to successfully run the organization as chairman of the board and corporate president.

Welcome to my blog, Addie and Knox. Thanks for taking the time from your busy schedules to be here with us today. I'll try not to keep you very long.

Addie:  Thank you for inviting us, Samantha.

Knox:  It's our pleasure. I've blocked out this afternoon on my schedule, so we have plenty of time. What would you like to know?

Why don't we start with how you first met? I understand it was while you were both attending the University of Washington in Seattle.

Knox:  That's right. I was starting my senior year and would be graduating the following spring.

Addie:  Knox was definitely the big man on campus, and I was the freshman just taking my first steps toward my chosen career. The moment I laid eyes on him, I wondered how I could get an introduction to someone who appeared to already have a large circle of friends.

Knox:  Our personalities immediately clicked and we became good friends right away. We would often have lunch together on campus, study together, catch the occasional movie, attend events on campus.

Addie:  That was always during the week. On weekends he returned to his home in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. We never actually dated. It was always doing things together as friends, but no real dates. Then he graduated, returned to his home, and I never heard from him again.

Knox:  Those were difficult times for me. My father was ill. He insisted that I had to stay in college and get my degree in Business Administration, but I also needed to learn as much as I could about all facets of the family business in preparation for taking over. He died two years after I graduated. So, at the tender young age of 24, I was head of a major corporation and really had my hands full. For the first few years, I had absolutely no personal life.

Addie:  I didn't really know anything about his personal situation away from college. He kept all of that to himself. I didn't know he had taken over the running of the company until the managing editor of the magazine where I worked came to me with a new assignment. But that didn't mean he hadn't been on my mind for that twelve years. Our relationship during college days had always been platonic, but that question of 'what if' had never gone away.

Knox: Yes, during that time I often thought about her, [reaches over and takes her hand] wondered where she was, what she was doing, was she happy with the way her life had turned out. And with that, there lingered the thought of 'what if.'

So we fast forward twelve years from the last time you saw each other to present day.

Addie:  I was absolutely thrilled when I was handed the assignment of a feature article about train travel and train excursion vacations in Canada with the focus being on the Mallory corporation as the leader in the field. I was scheduled to meet with their head of promotion. Would a major article in an international travel magazine be enough for the president of the company to be personally involved?

Knox:  I arranged my schedule so I could attend that meeting. I had no idea who the photojournalist would be that the magazine was sending to do the article. I don't know which was greater, my shock or my pleasure at seeing Addie again. We went to dinner that evening after the meeting. It was as if we instantly picked up where we left off, no awkward moments or uncomfortable lapses in conversation. But underlying everything was the nagging question of 'what if.'

Addie:  It was the same for me, the constant thought of 'what if.' My schedule called for me to be in Canada on this assignment for about two weeks which included taking one of the train excursion trips from Vancouver to Banff National Park and back to Vancouver with stops along the way. We spent as much time together as possible while I was in Vancouver which included a weekend getaway to a marvelous romantic inn on Vancouver Island. It didn't take long for me to realize that I had become emotionally involved with him during that time in college, I just didn't realize it at the time.

Knox:  I did everything I could, rescheduled meetings, even neglected some aspects of my job, in order to spend as much time with her as possible while constantly aware of the limited amount of time she would be in Canada before returning to her home in Seattle.

Addie:   We shared the details of our lives during those twelve years we had been apart. [she shot a quick look toward Knox] At least I thought that's what we were doing.

That's an ominous statement. What does it mean?

Knox:  It means I was a jerk but didn't realize it at the time.

[laughs] I'm going to need a better explanation than that.

Knox:  [laughs] Then you'll need to read the book.

Well, let me try this. Addie, you took one of the train excursions for the article you were doing. How long were you gone? Were you and Knox able to stay in contact while you were on the train? Do trains have the availability of allowing passengers to use cell phones while traveling through the wilderness between populated areas?

Addie:  Hmm, communication while on the train. I think how we resolved that is another reason why you'll need to read the book.

What about after the train excursion? How long before you needed to return to Seattle?

Addie:  After returning to Vancouver at the conclusion of the train excursion? Probably the worst day of my life.

Now that's a comment that truly needs an explanation.

Knox:  It was probably the worst day of my life, too. And you'll find the explanation in the book.

 Thanks, Addie and Knox, for being with me today. You leave me with only one conclusion—I'll need to read the book.

CANADIAN CRAVINGS/Passport To Pleasure series from The Wild Rose Press for their Scarlet Rose line of erotic romance.  www.thewildrosepress.com  A work assignment reunites college friends after twelve years. Will they fight the heated desire or pursue what might have been?

BLURB:

Addie Burton has a successful career as a photojournalist for an international travel magazine. When her new assignment in Canada brings her in contact with a friend from college she hasn't seen in twelve years, the attraction is instantaneous. She's ready to mix business with pleasure.

Knox Mallory is shocked to discover the photojournalist doing the magazine article on his company is a woman who had sparked his lust during his college days. Family circumstances had prevented him from acting on his desire, but he's hoping to resurrect what might have been.

Can two weeks satisfy their Canadian cravings or will it lead to more?

CANADIAN CRAVINGS/Passport To Pleasure series from The Wild Rose Press www.thewildrosepress.com  for their Scarlet Rose line of erotic romance 

ISBN 978-1-5092-4916-9 Digital

Amazon buy link:  https://www.amazon.com/Canadian-Cravings-Passport-Pleasure-Samantha-ebook/dp/B0BVRQWXFR

Barnes & Noble buy link:  https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/canadian-cravings-samantha-gentry/1143069026?ean=2940186757122

Also available at other online vendors

Excerpts and other information on my website:  www.samanthagentry.com

Visit my blog:  https://samanthagentry.blogspot.com 

Sunday, April 16, 2023

CANADIAN CRAVINGS release day 2023-04-12

Wednesday, April 12, 2023, was release day for CANADIAN CRAVINGS, part of the Passport To Pleasure series from The Wild Rose Press for their Scarlet Rose line of sensual romance.  Check out the story of Addie Burton and Knox Mallory, college friends who reunited after twelve years apart.

BLURB:

Addie Burton has a successful career as a photojournalist for an international travel magazine. When her new assignment in Canada brings her in contact with a friend from college she hasn't seen in twelve years, the attraction is instantaneous. She's ready to mix business with pleasure.

Knox Mallory is shocked to discover the photojournalist doing the magazine article on his company is a woman who had sparked his lust during his college days. Family circumstances had prevented him from acting on his desire, but he's hoping to resurrect what might have been.

Can two weeks satisfy their Canadian cravings or will it lead to more?

G-Excerpt #4:

“When you get back from the train excursion for your article, we’ll go someplace special for dinner. Won’t you still have a couple of days before you need to return to Seattle?”

“I might be able to work out a couple of days of wiggle room before I need to be in my office at the magazine. However, I can’t think of any place more special than that beautiful inn on Vancouver Island where we spent the weekend.”

They talked for a few more minutes before terminating the call. Addie had tried to avoid thinking of the end of her assignment, of the day she needed to return home and throw herself into writing the article and making the final selection of the appropriate photographs to illustrate it. The drive between Seattle and Vancouver was less than three hours. It would be easy to spend weekends together.

Then a dark cloud of doubt and concern settled over her. The time she had been in Vancouver, the time they had spent together, had it only been the convenience of them being in the same place at the same time? Twelve years since they last saw each other, and the moment he walked through the door of Greg’s office, it was as if they knew each other but were meeting for the first time.

Would he want to maintain a long-distance relationship? Granted, it wasn’t that far, but it precluded having lunch together or a last-minute decision to have dinner or go to a movie. They would be limited to weekends and nothing spontaneous. He headed a successful corporation in Vancouver and couldn’t relocate to Seattle. Her job could allow her to settle in Vancouver and still take assignments from the magazine, but it was a moot point. He hadn’t indicated anything permanent, hadn’t mentioned anything beyond the immediate future of a couple of days after she returned from the train tour.

Her ringing phone startled her out of her thoughts. Assuming it was Knox again, she answered it without checking the caller I.D.

“Hi, Addie. I hope I’m not calling too late.”

“Corey!” A quick surge of anger darted through her. “I told you not to call me again.”

“You didn’t tell me you were in Canada…specifically in Vancouver.”

“How did you know that?”

“Your magazine told me you were there on assignment.”

“Well, I’ll have to talk to them about that when I get back. They’re not supposed to give out personal information on me to strangers.”

“I’m not a stranger. I’m your fiancé.”

“Perhaps once, long, long ago in a galaxy far, far away. But not here, not now, and very definitely never again. I don’t know how much more succinct I can be. Am I going to have to take out a restraining order on you? Do not call me. Do not try to see me. Do not try to contact me in any way. Have I made myself clear? Do you understand?”

G-Excerpt #5:

The train whistle interrupted her thoughts signaling their departure. Then the train slowly started to move. A little flutter of excitement flitted around in her stomach. She watched out the window. The train gradually gained a little speed as it pulled away from the platform. Then movement and commotion on the platform caught her attention. Someone tossed a suitcase in the open door of the car behind hers then grabbed the handrail and swung up to the stairs, boarding the train literally at the last second before it had gained enough speed to prevent the action.

She couldn’t stop the amused chuckle that escaped her throat. Is that normal procedure? Last man on the train as it’s pulling out of the station? Or has a late arriving employee almost missed showing up for work?

She continued to watch until the train cleared the platform, left the station, and headed down the tracks. The clackety-clack of the train wheels on the rails told her the excursion had officially started.

She returned to her work as she checked the daily itinerary Jimmy had given to the guests. Before she could become absorbed in making notes for her article outline, the sound of someone knocking at the door of her cabin interrupted her.

One of the guests taking me up on my offer to answer any questions or to give their opinions about the trip even though we just left the station? Or maybe wanting to comment on a previous trip they had taken?

As soon as she opened the door, she felt as if all the oxygen had been sucked out of the room, that she couldn’t breathe. Then overwhelming joy quickly replaced the shock. Tears of happiness welled in her eyes. On the other side of the door, looking more desirable than anyone had the right to, stood Knox Mallory.

“What are you doing here?” She blurted out.

A teasing grin tugged at the corners of his mouth. “That’s not a very friendly greeting, especially after I risked life and limb leaping onto a moving train.” He reached out and lightly touched her cheek. “May I come in?”

CANADIAN CRAVINGS is part of the Passport To Pleasure series from The Wild Rose Press www.thewildrosepress.com for their Scarlet Rose line of erotic romance. 

Buy link for Amazon and Barnes and Noble  Also available at other online vendors

Excerpts and other information on my website:  www.samanthagentry.com

On my blog next week, Sunday April 23, 2023, I'll be doing an interview with Addie Burton and Knox Mallory—the two main characters from CANADIAN CRAVINGS.

Sunday, April 9, 2023

10 AWESOME MUSEUMS NOT OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Museums—those public and private repositories of anything and everything that might be of interest to someone. Collections open to the public to enjoy and those that educate.  They encompass a wide variety of interests such as fine art, items showing the natural history of a region, or something as specific as a hair collection.

I recently found a list of 10 very specific museums/collections with a common thread—they are not open to the public.

CIA Museum

Needless to say, one of the most secretive agencies in the entire United States government (and the world) wouldn't just throw the doors of their archives open for everyone. The Central Intelligence Agency's internal museum is one of the most thorough collections of intelligence memorabilia on Earth with over 3,500 items. The collection includes documents from the OSS [Office of Strategic Services created in WW II, the forerunner of the CIA], spy weapons and equipment, and even an AK-47 rifle that belonged to Osama Bin Laden. The only public aspects of the Museum are three showcases at the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia. And that building isn't easy to get into, either.

International Museum And Library Of The Conjuring Arts

If you’re looking for a community of people who like to keep secrets, the CIA isn't the only place to look.  Professional magicians are right up there, too. Considering that their careers hinge on being able to fool people, magicians aren't crazy about opening up to the public. David Copperfield has used his vast fortune to amass a collection of over 150,000 pieces of magic history from practitioners like Harry Houdini and hundreds of others.  It's located in a 40,000 square foot Las Vegas warehouse that has a fake hat shop in the front. [I saw a television special about Houdini including an auction of items from his career with David Copperfield being one of the major successful bidders on several items]

MIT Museum Of Espionage [in Turkey, not the Massachusetts Institute of Technology :) ]

The United States isn't the only nation that keeps its intelligence archives in a private museum. Turkey's MIT spy group has been amassing an impressive collection of memorabilia from top-secret operations for years. Stored at the group's headquarters in Ankara, the museum's glass display cases contain such spy craft relics as a shoe wedge designed to store a hidden microphone, hollowed-out objects for secreting code books, and bugging devices discovered in Turkish embassies abroad during the Cold War. A Turkish newspaper requested access to the museum and was allowed in for one day, but that's the only time the Museum of Espionage has ever been seen by the public.

Canadian Museum Of Making

It is possible to get inside the doors of the Canadian Museum of Making, which is located on a private ranch near Cochrane, Alberta, but it's not easy. The museum's owner, Ian MacGregor, is very picky about who he allows through the doors. From the outside, you'd never know that the 20,000 square foot museum is even there, because he constructed the complex entirely underground. Inside is one of the world's most extensive collections of mechanical objects from between 1750 and 1920. Every once in a while, MacGregor will open the doors to select people, but it's a rare occasion.

El Museo del Enervantes

Intended for use in the training of military staff waging Mexico's seemingly endless war against the drug cartels, El Museo del Enervantes, located in Mexico City, is a private museum that chronicles every aspect of the world of narcoterrorism. In-depth exhibits illustrate the manufacturing process involved in making cocaine, heroin, and other drugs. A huge display case shows off dozens of handguns confiscated from drug lords, many encrusted with gold and jewels. There is also a plaque commemorating all the Mexican soldiers who died on duty since 1976.

The Honda Secret Museum

Many automakers rent out space to spotlight important moments in their history, but Honda defies the trend by making their history museum closed to the public. Assembled by company veteran Lou Staller, it's a collection of almost 50 cars and motorcycles that commemorate Honda's successes and failures. Included in the collection is a Honda N-600 from 1970—the first passenger car the company sold in the States—and the 1997 EV Plus, the very first electric vehicle to be marketed here. The museum is only accessible to Honda employees, and the vast majority of them have never been there, making it a treasure trove for car enthusiasts.

Musée d'Anatomie Delmas-Orfila-Rouvière

The Musée d'Anatomie Delmas-Orfila-Rouvière permanently closed its door to everyone—public and invited only—in 2005. Prior to that time, it was the largest and most complete anatomy museum in France. The Museum's collection began in 1794 and expanded steadily over the years to include upwards of 5,800 anatomic items from humans and other animals. Some of the items on display includes casts of the heads of executed 19th century criminals, comparative anatomy displays of reptiles and birds, and skulls of deceased mental patients. It occupied the eighth floor of the Descartes University's school of medicine, and access was granted only to the medical elite.

The Black Museum

Scotland Yard, one of the most famous crime-fighting institutions in history, has amassed some serious items. If you want to see them, they're kept in the Black Museum. Located at police headquarters in London, this collection of evidence from some of Scotland Yard's most notorious crimes includes the pots serial killer Dennis Nilsen used to cook his victims and a taunting letter from Jack the Ripper. Also on display is a vast array of weapons used in the commission of crimes, including some cleverly disguised tools of mayhem. There have been discussions about finally making the museum open to the public. I believe it's now open on a limited basis.

The U.S. Secret Service Museum

It appears that taxpayer money is supporting a disproportionate number of museums that aren't open to the public. Located in the nondescript office building that houses the Secret Service headquarters is a small private museum that's only open to invited guests. Inside the one-room museum are artifacts from some of the most shocking crimes in American history—assassination attempts on Presidents. Among these artifacts is the bullet-scarred window from Ronald Reagan's limousine on the day that John Hinckley attacked and the assault rifle that Francisco Duran used to spray bullets into the White House in 1994.

The Zymoglyphic Museum

The Zymoglyphic Museum in San Mateo, California, is open to the public—but only for two days out of every year. The museum's creator houses his collection in a small outbuilding off of his garage, down a nondescript suburban cul-de-sac. Inside is the world's largest assemblage of animals and artifacts from the Zymoglyphic Era…a period in Earth's past that never existed. The dioramas, housed in aquarium tanks, are well thought out and executed with incredible attention to detail.

Sunday, April 2, 2023

12 Unscripted Movie Lines That Became Classics part 3 of 3

This is the final offering of my 3-part blog about movies. It's a given that actors speak the dialogue written in the script, but that's not always the case. Some of our most memorable movie lines were not in the script. They were adlibbed by the actor and were so great they were kept in the movie. And many of them became classics. Here are some of those now classic lines of unscripted movie dialogue.

Casablanca (1942)

"Here's looking at you, kid."

Humphrey Bogart first said this line while teaching Ingrid Bergman how to play poker between takes. The phrase came out spontaneously during one of the Paris flashback scenes and became a recurring line in the movie, most memorably near the end.

Midnight Cowboy (1969)

"I'm walkin' here!"

Dustin Hoffman was genuinely angry when a taxi ran a red light and almost hit him and Jon Voight while they were filming a scene on the city streets. Hoffman stayed in character and the line stayed in the movie.

Taxi Driver (1976)

"Are you talkin' to me?"

Robert De Niro did a brilliant job of improvising the entire scene, inspired by a single sentence in the script—Travis looks in the mirror.

Young Frankenstein (1974)

"What hump?"

For his character of Igor, Marty Feldman kept shifting the hump on his back as a joke for the other cast members. After someone noticed, the improvisation was worked into the script.

Goodfellas (1990)

"What do you mean funny? Funny how? … Funny like I'm a clown, I amuse you?"

Joe Pesci based this dialogue on an encounter he had years earlier with an actual mobster at a restaurant where Pesci worked.

Jaws (1975)

"You're gonna need a bigger boat."

Roy Scheider didn't have a line right after his close encounter with a Great White, so he made up this one.

Apocalypse Now (1979)

"You're an errand boy, sent by a grocery clerk."

On location, Marlon Brando folded up pages of the script and turned them into a paper hat, which he put on his head. He later ad-libbed some 18 minutes of dialogue for his character, Colonel Kurtz.

The Third Man (1949)

"In Italy for 30 years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed. They produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love, 500 years of democracy and peace. And what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."

Only Orson Welles would have the confidence to add his own lines to a screenplay by Graham Greene.

Silence of the Lambs (1991)

"Hsssssss."

Anthony Hopkins made an unexpected hissing sound right after delivering this memorable line about eating the census taker's liver with fava beans and a nice chianti. He intended it as a joke. The director kept it in the movie, along with Jodie Foster's stunned reaction.

Deliverance (1972)

"Squeal like a pig!"

The most disturbing line in the movie was improvised on set in an effort to clean up the dialogue, with the hope that Deliverance could eventually be shown on television.

Dr. Strangelove (1964)

"Mein Fuhrer, I can walk!"

Peter Sellers, who played three characters in Stanley Kubrick's Cold War satire, ad-libbed much of his dialogue. The lines were later added to the screenplay after they had been spoken.

The Shining (1980)

"Heeeeere's Johnny!"

Director Stanley Kubrick, who lived in England, didn't know the reference to Johnny Carson's Tonight Show. Jack Nicholson's dark joke nearly ended up on the cutting room floor.

There are, of course, many more occasions where this has happened, producing memorable movie lines. This is merely a sampling.