These 20 Memes Are Only Funny If You Grew up in the 1980s

From Stranger Things to reboots of all our favorite movies franchises, it’s plain to see we’ve got 80s fever!

And these memes will be pretty hilarious to anyone who lived through those great times.

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10 Interesting Facts About Russia

Russia is a fascinating country, rich in history and culture.

It’s also very misunderstood by many of us in the West. Take a look at these 10 facts about the largest country on Earth.

1. Not on time

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2. Looks like fun

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3. Glass Beach

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4. Hmmmm

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5. Good idea

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6. Meteor

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7. Comrade SpongeBob

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8. Doesn’t sound like fun

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9. Cool

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10. Okay…

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Who Owns the Moon?

Can you believe that no one has set foot on the moon since the United States last landed way back in 1972? It’s hard to believe, but it’s true. Now, several countries like Japan, India, and China are all planning to send up crewed moon missions in the near future, and the question of who has a claim to the moon is cropping up all over again – this time, for space lawyers.

Really.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

In a recent post for Real Clear Science, an attorney and professor of space law at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law, Frans von der Dunk, looks at the question of moon ownership in light of the 1967 Outer Space Treaty between the U.S. and Soviet Union. The treaty solidified the moon as a “global commons,” which basically means it can belong to no single nation.

Any secrets, resources, and other untapped potential should be used for the betterment of global society, and the U.S. even shared its soil and rock samples with Russia during the Cold War.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Von der Dunk does say that even though no one can own the land on the moon, the treaty is less clear about cultivated resources from the moon and asteroids – if one country mines assets, can they own them, or must they be distributed?

Which is why, I suppose, there is space law and space lawyers floating (heh) about these days, and why they’re probably going to be more in demand than ever as various nations plan to explore the moon face-to-face once again. Some believe that mining on the moon or on asteroids will be a lot like commercial fishing – you have to be licensed, and there will be guidelines, but you keep what you catch – while others, particularly in Russia, believe the previous treaty requires communal benefits on anything extracted from space.

Photo Credit: Touchstone Pictures

So, the answer is that no one owns the moon, but the stuff in and on the moon? Well, that’s complicated, Cold War-era treaty or no.

Nothing much is clear, really, so perhaps space remains the last great frontier – for explorers and lawyers. What a time to be alive.

h/t: Mental_Floss

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15 Quotes from Mister Rogers That Will Remind You There’s Still Good in the World

If there’s anything we can all agree on in these extremely divided times, it’s that we need more people like Fred Rogers in the world.

And to commemorate the new documentary about Rogers, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, here are 15 quotes from the man himself.

1.

“As human beings, our job in life is to help people realize how rare and valuable each one of us really is, that each of us has something that no one else has – or ever will have – something inside that is unique to all time.”

2.

“There is no normal life that is free of pain. It’s the very wrestling with our problems that can be the impetus for our growth.”

3.

“I hope you’re proud of yourself for the times you’ve said ‘yes,’ when all it meant was extra work for you and was seemingly helpful only to somebody else.”

4.

“It’s not the honors and the prizes and the fancy outsides of life which ultimately nourish our souls. It’s the knowing that we can be trusted, that we never have to fear the truth, that the bedrock of our very being is good stuff. That’s what makes growing humanity the most potentially glorious enterprise on earth.”

5.

“It takes strength to acknowledge our anger, and sometimes more strength yet to curb the aggressive urges anger may bring and to channel them into nonviolent outlets.”

6.

“When I was very young, most of my childhood heroes wore capes, flew through the air, or picked up buildings with one arm. They were spectacular and got a lot of attention. But as I grew, my heroes changed, so that now I can honestly say that anyone who does anything to help a child is a hero to me.”

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“There’s no ‘should’ or ‘should not’ when it comes to having feelings. They’re part of who we are and their origins are beyond our control.”

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“The really important ‘great’ things are never center stage of life’s dramas; they’re always ‘in the wings.’ That’s why it’s so essential for us to be mindful of the humble and the deep rather than the flashy and the superficial.”

9.

“When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’”

10.

“Please think of the children first. If you ever have anything to do with their entertainment, their food, their toys, their custody, their childcare, their health care, their education – listen to the children, learn about them, learn from them. Think of the children first.”

11.

“When I say it’s you I like, I’m talking about that part of you that knows that life is far more than anything you can ever see or hear or touch. That deep part of you that allows you to stand for those things without which humankind cannot survive. Love that conquers hate, peace that rises triumphant over war, and justice that proves more powerful than greed.”

12.

“It’s our insides that make us who we are, that allow us to dream and wonder and feel for others. That’s what’s essential. That’s what will always make the biggest difference in our world.”

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“Love isn’t a state of perfect caring. It is an active noun like ‘struggle.’ To love someone is to strive to accept that person exactly the way he or she is, right here and now – and to go on caring even through times that may bring us pain.”

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“There are three ways to ultimate success. The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind. The third way is to be kind.”

15.

“I hope that you’ll remember/ Even when you’re feeling blue/ That it’s you I like/ It’s you yourself/ It’s you, it’s you I like.”

Check out the trailer for the film below.

h/t: Mashable

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Documentary Claims That Meghan Markle Is Related to America’s First Serial Killer

Meghan Markle has been in the news non-stop lately because of her recent marriage to Prince Harry, but it’s another story about the new member of the Royal Family that is causing some people to scratch their heads.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

A BBC documentary entitled Meet the Markles claims that Markle is distantly related to the man known as America’s first serial killer, H.H. Holmes.

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Jeff Mudgett, Holmes’ great-great-grandson, discovered that he and Markle are eighth cousins. Holmes is believed to have killed dozens of people in Chicago in a “murder castle” he had specially constructed with secret rooms and chambers.

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Mudgett makes the claim based on Holmes’ diaries that he inherited. He said about the connection to Markle: “We did a study with the FBI and CIA and Scotland Yard regarding handwriting analysis. It turns out [H. H. Holmes] was Jack the Ripper. This means Meghan is related to Jack the Ripper. I don’t think the Queen knows. I am not proud he is my ancestor. Meghan won’t be either.”

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Holmes was executed in Philadelphia in 1896. I have a feeling we probably won’t be hearing from Markle about this story.

h/t: Mental Floss

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5 Facts You Might Not Know About Teddy Roosevelt

Teddy Roosevelt is one of the most colorful and fascinating figures in American history. The 26th President of the United States had a huge personality and left a legacy that we will study forever.

Here are 5 facts you might not know about the man, the myth, the legend.

1. He was a frail kid

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Roosevelt was a sickly boy who often battled illness and asthma. On top of that, he was frail and not a strong physical presence. As a teen, Teddy hit the gym, taking up boxing, gymnastics, and weightlifting. He transformed into a powerful man who was dedicated to physical fitness for the rest of his life.

2. He tried his hand at ranching

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Roosevelt loved wide open spaces and the untamed nature of the West. He went into business and operated two ranches. The ventures lost money, and by 1898 Roosevelt sold his shares in the properties.

3. He was an accomplished writer

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In fact, after his Presidency, Roosevelt continued to write and supported himself financially by authoring books. His love of the outdoors was an interesting topic for him, and his titles included Hunting Trips of a Ranchman and Winning of the West.

4. He’s the youngest President in American history

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John F. Kennedy became President when he was 43-years-old, Bill Clinton was 46, and Barack Obama was 47. Roosevelt? He was 42-years-old when he became President in 1901 after William McKinley was assassinated.

5. He was the first President to leave the country while in office

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Roosevelt visited Panama in 1906 while serving as Commander in Chief. The Panama Canal was under construction at the time and Roosevelt wanted to see the project himself.

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These 15 Native American Tribes Share Their Best Legends and Ghost Stories

Native American tales and legends are absolutely fascinating. Despite having been passed down for centuries, many people do not know much about them.

An AskReddit user recently posed the question, “Native Americans of Reddit, what are your or your tribe’s ghost stories, legends, or supernatural occurrences?” This is what we learned.

1. Nightmares

“See-at-coh (don’t know the translation in English). Lived at this lake and it was his spot. We DO NOT go there or he will kill you. Used to have nightmares about him based on what I was taught as a kid. Like how you could stand at the edge of the water and be looking in and he would come out of it and just grab you. No whistling at night and keep windows covered.

But then the mountain blew up [Mt. Saint Helen] and filled in the lake so don’t know if he’s still around or not.”

2. Bushmen

“Dené from northern British Columbia here, my mom used to always tell me stories of the Nehgunni [Nakani], or bushmen/wild-men when I was young, they were people who lived in the forest and took away people who wandered too far out, specifically children.

I always figured these stories were created by my people to serve two purposes, first to teach young children to not wander far off, and second to give explanations to kidnappings or missing people.”

3. Florida

“Miccosukee tribal member here (South Florida) and for us it’s the little people. Essentially really small people (like barbie doll sized and smaller) that live in the trees. They play jokes and stuff mainly unless you piss them off. Had family members get tricks played on them that couldn’t be explained. And then we have our fair share of stories that circulate our reservation like a tribal member being taken by the little people. All on the reservation in the Everglades (like 40 mins west of Miami).”

4. Oh, that’s why…

“Lenni Lenape story about why dogs sniff each other’s butts.

When the humans slept, dogs would get together and party, but not before taking their tails off. They’d dance the entire night, put their tails back on and return home. But one time a wolf found them and all the dogs had to scramble away to their homes for safety, but a lot of them grabbed the wrong tail. They never danced again at night because they were afraid of the wolf, so they were stuck with weird mismatched tails for the rest of their lives.

This is the reason that dogs sniff each other’s butts; to see if the other dog has their tail.”

5. Raven

“In the beginning there was no light in the world, because an old magician kept it hidden in a box inside his house. Raven, who was always hungry, didn’t like the darkness because it was difficult to find food. One day he was looking for food near the old magician’s house. He heard a voice saying, “I have a box, and inside this box is another box, and inside this there is another box, and inside the smallest box is all the light in the world.” Raven decided to steal the light.

Raven waited until the old man’s daughter went down to the river to collect water. Just as she was dipping her basket into the river, he changed himself into a *hemlock needle. The needle floated into her basket. When the girl drank some water, she swallowed Raven too.

Inside the girl’s belly Raven took the form of a human baby. He grew and grew, and in time she gave birth to a funny looking child with black eyes and a big nose. The old man loved his grandson so much that he gave in to the child’s every wish. Raven became spoilt and greedy. He was bored with all his toys, and wanted to play with the box that held the light. Finally the grandfather opened the box and tossed the glowing ball of light to Raven.

As soon as Raven caught the light, he immediately changed into his bird form. Holding the light in his beak, he flew up the chimney hole into the dark world. The magician was angry. He wanted to get the light back into his box. He flew after Raven. The light was heavy in Raven’s beak, and he was getting tired. The magician was coming closer. Raven broke off some pieces of the light and threw them into the sky.

They became the stars. The magician was still coming closer, so Raven broke off another piece of the light and threw it into the sky. It became the moon. Finally Raven became so tired that he tossed the last and biggest piece of the light into the sky. It became the sun; and that is how daylight came to the world.”

6. Uktena

“Uktena. It’s a legend about a horned snake in Tsalagi (Cherokee) legend. Uktena is said to be very large and round like a tree trunk, with horns on his head. The only way to wound him is to shoot at a singular spot on his forehead that emits bright light. It’s similar to a diamond. If you defeat Uktena, you become a miracle worker. A great warrior. Yet, once you see the light of his forehead, you run toward it instead of trying to escape. Even to see Uktena sleeping is death. Not to the hunter, but to his family.”

7. From Mexico

“First of all, I live in rural Mexico. There are many, many different People. The ones who settled here speak Nahuatl. This took place in the early 1900’s. One of my favourites is the nahual. Some people were thought to be able to turn into an animal. Most of them could only turn into one, but the most powerful could turn into different animals . There was a man who owned an hacienda where my town is, and he had a sort of overseer that everyone was afraid of .

Said overseer could take a message all the way to the next state (think hundreds of miles) and bring back a sealed response in a single day. He also seemed to know everything everyone did, all the time. He was rumoured to be a nahual that could turn into a coyote.

His quarters were heavily warded in his absence, which only added fuel to the rumor, for you can only kill a nahual if you find the human skin he sheds to transform, and burn said skin.”

8. No owls

“That owls are a sign of death. My mom won’t let anything that has to do with owls in her house because of it.”

9. Walking Sam

” ‘Walking Sam’ skulks in the shadows of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota and convinces people to take their own lives, especially young people. He’s 7 feet tall, very thin and has no mouth. When he stretches out his long arms, nooses hang down with Lakota children hanging from them. Walking Sam finds you when you’re alone and puts thoughts in your head until you feel worthless and kill yourself. Sometimes Walking Sam is depicted looking like Abraham Lincoln, complete with the stovepipe hat. “Walking Sam”, “Uncle Sam”, I don’t know if that’s where the name came from.

But Walking Sam is an evil infected upon the people when the Oceti Sakowin were forced onto the reservations; he isn’t a legend of the people before Pine Ridge Reservation existed. Lincoln was President when the Lakota were being forced onto reservations. Lincoln also ordered the execution of 38 Lakota men the day after Christmas in 1862. It’s the largest mass execution in U.S. history. I always thought Walking Sam was Lincoln. They carved his face onto Ŝa´kpe Tuŋkaŋŝi in the Paha Sa´pa (Mount Rushmore was Six Grandfathers in the Black Hills) My Father attended Holy Rosary boarding school at Pine Ridge in the 1940s & 1950s, but our people didn’t live on the reservation. My Grandmother said evil stalked the people there. My Father never wanted us to ever even visit any of our cousins or his Uncles there.”

10. The rules

“I know the [Haudenosaunee] rules.

If you hear someone you know calling your name, but you also know they are not supposed to be there, DON’T respond. Especially if they are out of sight and insisting you come to them.

Always play group games in counter-clockwise order, otherwise your playing with the dead.

Also don’t eat in the dark, this is considered inviting the dead to eat with you. If you can extend your hand all the way out and still see it clearly then your fine.

Don’t play card games past midnight. If you do, and someone knocks at the door, don’t answer it.

Try not to drop your cards, if you do then don’t bend down to pick them up, or you will see hooves under the table. That’s bad.

Say thank you after meals, even if you’re the one that made it. Even better if you say it in native tongue. If someone finishes their meal and says thank you, you say “you’re welcome”, even if you didn’t give it to them. Even better in native tongue.
Don’t try to contact spirits, especially with board games. This is not a tribe custom, it’s more of an unspoken common sense among the Rez people.

After someone dies, you should gather family as quickly as possible to have feasts for 10 days. The first dinner is large, then every meal after that is smaller feasts meant for portions of the family to come at different times to help. The last feast on the 10 day is the closing dinner, which is the largest, with the entire family expected to show up and help. For every meal of these 10 days, put out a plate of the deceased’s favorite foods first. Contrary to rule 4, you do not say thank you at any time during these 10 days. This is because it is believed that it takes the dead 10 days to relive their lives before they pass on, so this is your last chance to eat with them.

If a bird flies into your house, someone’s going to die.

Pregnant woman should not hold any child that isn’t theirs.

It’s accepted that if you actually try to curse someone, literally going through all of the steps with the intention of harm, not an accidentally wishing them bad luck, then your family will also be cursed horribly.
If you play with fire you’ll wet the bed.”

11. Giant twins

“Yamǫ́rıa & Yamǫǫ̀zha the giant twins [of the Dené].

There are landmarks all around the territory I live in that is exhibited as “proof” they were alive.
In the middle of the Mackenzie river( biggest river in the NorthWest Territories) there is a large stone sticking out of the river which looks like the petrified guts of a beaver, there is a giant branchless, leafless tree sticking out of the top of this stone.
It is said that Yamǫǫ̀zha had hunted a giant beaver and gutted him there in the river. He used his spear to anchor down the cuts so fish may feed on them. They are still there to this day.

Yamǫ́rıa’s body can be seen laying down, it is essentially a mountain range that looks like a giant human laying on his back, completely with face and feet. This can be seen from the peak of the hill as you enter a town called Ft. Liard, the southwestern most town in the NWT.”

12. Trickery

“My grandmother told me stories of the Brownies who lived in the trees and played tricks on humans. According to her, they loved honey and lemons and if you left them a treat, they wouldn’t play tricks on you. (I’m in Florida, too.)”

13. Stick Indians

“Yakama tribe has a similar legend – when I grew up mom, granda, etc referred to them as “Stick Indians.” Other stuff I’ve found calls them “Stick Shower Indians,” due to them having the propensity to capture you, tie you down, and shower you with tiny spears.

My uncle had a story about being out hunting and hearing them behind the trees. At first he thought he was just sauced (Uncle was a drinker) – but he started hearing them to tell him to run. Then he heard the bear. He ran, and he listened. The voices in the trees guided him to an old trappers cabin and he held up for the night. Heard the whispers until he fell asleep. When he woke up, no whispers. No bear. So, he went back to hunting.

*ETA –

We were NEVER allowed to talk about Stick Indians while camping, as it would attract their attention.”

14. Bogeyman

“The Raven Mocker was our version of the bogeyman. The most feared of the Cherokee witches, they prey on the sick and dying. They eat the heart of their victim and add years to their life for every year their victim would have lived.”

15. Devil creature

“We have a devil creature that stalks our woods.

I wasn’t raised on the rez (adopted out), but visited family enough to know that this creature was a legitimate fear of many.

I remember once last year, I dropped my mom off at her friend’s house. They got into a fight and she ended up leaving. She wanted to go to the next village over (a 10 mile walk) and was intoxicated enough to not be afraid of walking alone. She got picked up by an officer on the highway who informed her that it wasn’t safe to be walking near the woods like that and ended up driving her to the village. She told me that he talked about the devil creature the whole ride.

Also, Sharp Elbows, Little People, and the Tall Man – my mom would tell me stories about how she’d see him in the cornfield by her house when she was a child, and sometimes it’d look in her windows, despite being on the second floor.”

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10 Interesting Facts About the Past and Present of Film

For over 100 years, movies have been a part of the human experience. We use them as a way to escape, a way to tell stories, and a way to come together as people.

Take a look at these facts about the silver screen to brush up on your film history.

1. Art imitating life

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2.The master of horror

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3. He got punk’d

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4. Authentic

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5. Zootopia

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6. It’s all connected

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7. Cowboys

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8. Time capsule

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9. Censorship

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10. Movie magic

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8+ Facts About Shoes That Don’t Stink

When it comes to facts about your feet (and what you put on them), these can’t be beat!

See for yourself.

1. Handy

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2. They had style back then

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3. Did you notice?

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4. Good thinkin’

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5. A good man

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6. Pumps!

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7. Chicle

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8. Do you have a pair???

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9. Try this out

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7 Creepy Facts About Murderers

True crime seems to be all the rage these days on TV, film, and in print.

Take a look at these 7 facts about real-life killers…sleep tight.

1. Last words

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2. Uncontrollable

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3. Footage

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4. Fiends

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5. Study the mind of a criminal

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6. Dating Game Killer

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7. Ed Gein

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