6+ Captivating Facts You Never Knew About Rainbows

Rainbows can cheer up even the gloomiest of days. They’re colorful, huge, and can appear just about anywhere.

And that’s why we all love them.

Take a look at these 7 facts about rainbows. And have a great day.

1. Rainbow art

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2. Double rainbow!

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3. Fogbows

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4. Mirror image

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5. Never forget

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6. Finally snapped it

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7. Wow

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Check Out These Important Dos and Don’ts of Creativity

Creativity is a skill that needs to be nurtured and practiced if we want to see improvement. While every person is different, we can all learn a lot from this infographic that lays out the dos and don’ts of creativity.

These habits will help work out your brain and hopefully assist you in creating the best project possible.

So whether you’re working on a book, a painting, or a business venture, these tips will get your brain moving.

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Ever Wondered Why so Many Movie Posters Use the Same Typeface?

The next time you’re at your local movie theater, keep an eye out for the movie posters lining the halls. Notice anything peculiar? That’s right, a lot of posters use the same typeface to advertise films.

Photo Credit: Fox Searchlight

The familiar font is called Trajan, and it was designed by a woman named Carol Twombly in 1989. Twombly worked for Adobe, and the font became extremely popular because many designers used Adobe software to create movie posters. This signaled a change in the movie poster industry. The first film to use the font in its advertisements was At Play In the Fields of the Lord.

Photo Credit: Universal Pictures

Other designers caught on to Trajan and soon the font was seen everywhere in film advertising. These days, Trajan is used more for direct-to-video and B and genre movies.

Photo Credit: Sony Pictures

Designers use Trajan to give movies more of an “epic” feel, even if they are low-budget horror films. We’re talking about advertising here, remember?

Watch the video below for more about the history of the font and its use.

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The Origins of 5 of the Weirdest American Sayings

Slang is such a common part of everyday life that we rarely pause to think about where it originated.

Well, today’s your lucky day! Take a look at these 5 common sayings we use here in America and where they come from.

1. Riding shotgun

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

“Shotgun!” How many times have you yelled that on the way to a car with your friends and family?

This is another phrase that dates to the Old West. When stagecoaches crossed miles and miles of open land, danger lurked around every corner. The man who sat next to the stagecoach driver was known as the express messenger. That person was always armed with, you guessed it, a shotgun to protect the coach and its valuables/people.

2. “Stomping ground”

Photo Credit: pxhere

Another one you hear all the time. Hey, I even use it myself from time to time. The term originally started in British English around 1820 as “stamping ground” with an “a”. It referred to places where animals slept at night where vegetation was trampled down.

In the 1850s the term became “stomping ground” in America. Both terms are still used, FYI.

3. “Shoot the breeze”

Photo Credit: Public Domain

We all do this, some of us more than others. Just chit chat and talk about nothing in particular with a friend. The term originates in the American West, with its massive, wide open spaces. What better way to pass time than to shoot at, well…nothing. Passing the time by shooting into the air and making small talk eventually came to mean the same thing.

4. “My neck of the woods”

Photo Credit: Pixabay

This phrase has two possible origin stories. The first is that way back in the 16th century, English speakers used the word “neck” to describe all kinds of narrow or constricted things. Examples include the narrow neck of a bottle or an inlet of water. So the term possibly originates there.

Author Bill Bryson believes the phrase comes from the Algonquin word “niack”, which means a corner or a point. If this is the origin of “my neck of the woods,” it truly makes the phrase an Americanism.

5. Spill the beans

Photo Credit: Pixabay

When a person (hopefully not you) divulges sensitive information or tells a secret, they spill the beans. There are two possible theories for the explanation of this term.

The first states that Ancient Greek societies used different colored beans to cast votes on new members and that all the beans were spilled out to be counted after voting was complete.

The second (and the one that is generally more accepted) comes from a book that describes a vote that took place in Maine all the way back in 1650. Beans and corn were used to vote “yes” or “no”. Beans symbolized a “yes” vote.

What do you think about the origin of these terms? What are some others that you’d like to learn about?

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Monkeys in Panama Have Just Entered the Stone Age

Researchers have observed a small group of white-faced capuchin monkeys off the coast of Panama using stone tools to break nuts and shellfish. That’s right: a group of capuchin monkeys have entered the Stone Age.

Photo Credit: YouTube

These are the fourth group of primates to use stone tools after humans. It was reported all the way back in 2004 that monkeys on the island were using stone tools. In 2017, researchers placed cameras on Jicarón Island to try to capture the act on camera, which they eventually did.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Researchers saw the group of male monkeys using tools to break coconuts, snails, and crabs. For some reason, the same behavior has not spread to other groups of monkeys or other islands off Panama’s coast. The researchers think that the monkeys’ behavior may be by chance and isn’t necessarily the expected trajectory. The other three primate groups that have already entered the Stone Age are a group of capuchins in South America, macaques in Thailand, and chimpanzees in West Africa.

Watch the video below to see the monkeys in action.

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Do You See Blue or Purple Dots? Your Answer May Be Skewed

Recently, researchers at Harvard University released a study that makes a pretty surprising revelation: our concept of “threat” and the color blue, it turns out, is all relative and is not based on hard-and-fast rules. This is how the experiment worked: the researchers showed subjects a series of dots that ranged in color from very blue to very purple. For the first 200 times, the participants saw an equal number of blue and purple dots from the color spectrum. After that, the number of blue dots gradually decreased.

Photo Credit: YouTube

By the end, the subjects’ interpretation of the colors was different: dots they thought were purple in the first experiments they now saw as blue. This happened even after researchers told the subjects that the number of blue dots would decrease and they would be paid in cash for correct answers.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The team also had similar results when they conducted experiments about whether a face was threatening or a research proposal was unethical. Even when the rate of threatening faces or unethical proposals decreased, the subjects picked them out at the same ratio, and viewed benign faces or proposals as being threatening and unethical.

So what does it all mean? The researchers think the results might explain why so many people are pessimistic about the state of world affairs. The authors of the study believe that as social problems decrease (poverty, illiteracy) and become less common, issues that previously seemed minor or insignificant start to seem more problematic.

Take a look at this video for more information:

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Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Home is Now Available to Rent on Airbnb

Have you ever wanted the chance to live like a classic American writer did back in the 1930s? No, we’re not talking about time-travel.

Novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda, one of the most famous couples of the Jazz Age, lived in Montgomery, Alabama in 1931-1932 and the top floor of their home is now available to rent on Airbnb.

Zelda worked on her only novel Save Me the Waltz in the house and her husband wrote part of his novel Tender is the Night there. The couple’s daughter also lived with them in the home before she went away to boarding school.

The home is now a museum and is part of the Southern Literary Trail. The first floor of the home is the museum dedicated to the life and work of the writers, and the second floor is where tourists can stay for $150 a night in a two-bedroom apartment. Sounds like fun!

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This Girl’s ‘Netflix and Chill’ Date Gone Wrong is Full of Twists and Turns

Let’s face it: dating is tough. Many people turn to online dating to meet new people, and while this turns out well in many cases, there are also plenty of cases that turn out… weird.

Photo Credit: Ask Ideas

A fella named Xavier was gracious enough to take to Twitter and share this riveting story of his female friend’s recent “Netflix and Chill” adventure. Buckle up for this story…it’s time to let Xavier take over.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo Credit: Twitter

Wow, now I’m exhausted. I think I need a nap…

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Here’s Why Americans Call It ‘Soccer’ When Everyone Else Calls It ‘Football’

For a few weeks every four years, the World Cup seems to completely take over the world. Whether or not you keep up with it, you’ve undoubtedly noticed that Americans say ‘soccer’ and almost everyone else on the planet uses the term ‘football.’ So what gives? Well, it’s time for a history lesson.

Photo Credit: Facebook,Premier League

What we in the U.S. call soccer has been played in England since the Middle Ages. It started out as a game for the common folks, but in the early 1800s young men at the country’s most privileged schools started partaking in the sport. The rules of ‘football’ were standardized by the Football Association in 1863.

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Different sports began to splinter off from traditional English football, including rugby, and it became known widely as association football. The nickname for the sport was now assoccer, which, after a while, was shortened to soccer. Meanwhile, also in the late 1860s, American football was established at the college level, but in other parts of the world it was known as gridiron football or American football. Confused yet?

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Over in England, they dropped the “association” that preceded “football” and just made it football. So there were now two completely different sports on opposite sides of the Atlantic called football. To deal with the confusion, people in the U.S. started calling English football by its old nickname, soccer. And those are the terms we still use today.

Today, the term soccer is used in the countries that have their own versions of football: America, Canada, and Australia. Now get back to watching the World Cup!

Photo Credit: Facebook,Premier League

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Uranus Once Took a Hard Pounding

Alright, get your mind out of the gutter. The fact of the matter is that Uranus is an unusual planet in our solar system. The planet has a strange tilt and rotates around the sun on its side. Each pole of Uranus faces the Sun for 42 years before switching to the other side.

Photo Credit: Public Domain

So why does Uranus tilt? Scientists have long suspected that a major collision at some point in history caused the planet’s unusual orientation. And they were right. Astronomers at Durham University in England led an international team of researchers and studied 50 different possible impact scenarios.

Photo Credit: Durham University

The team concluded that a huge rock and ice formation twice the size of Earth hit Uranus during the formation of the solar system about 4 billion years ago. The impact caused Uranus’ tilt and also the planet’s low temperatures.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The researchers believe that debris from the collision might act as a thermal shield and that the heat from Uranus’ interior is trapped, making the planet’s outer atmosphere very cold. The team also believes that the impact could be the explanation for Uranus’ rings and moons.

Science!

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