People Keep NOT Recognizing Tony Hawk, and It’s Pretty Hilarious

Tony Hawk is one of the best skateboarders of all time…not to mention a video game tycoon and author. But believe it or not, many people don’t know what he looks like. For reference, here he is:

Photo Credit: Facebook,Tony Hawk

But Hawk keeps running into people who have no idea that they’re dealing with the man himself. The skateboarding legend has taken to Twitter to share some of the funny stories of people not recognizing him in public.

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

And then there was this guy…

Photo Credit: Twitter,tonyhawk

Bottom line, keep an eye out for Mr. Hawk. You never know where he’ll pop up…

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These 6+ Facts Will Brighten up Your Day (and Week!)

I think it’s safe to say we could all use a little pick-me-up to get us through the rest of this week.

And these facts are just what the Doctor ordered.

1. Good girl!

Photo Credit: did you know?

Okay, that’s adorable.

2. I’m all in!

Photo Credit: did you know?

…Where do I send the check?

3. Maybe you shouldn’t post that…

Photo Credit: did you know?

It takes that expression “parents have eyes in the back of their heads” to a whole other level.

4. What a great idea!

Photo Credit: did you know?

Yup, that’s legitimately awesome.

5. Look at that focus!

Photo Credit: did you know?

Uhh…that’s pretty amazing.

6. Empowering to say the least.

 

Photo Credit: did you know?

Photo Credit: Washington Post

Is it just a coincidence that these are also places incredibly serene?

7. Fun and depressing?

Photo Credit: did you know?

I think I’ll stick with therapy, but cool.

 

After reading those facts, do you have a little extra pep in your step? I hope so!

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10 Must-Watch Netflix Shows if You Love True Crime

It’s no secret that true crime dramas are on the rise. Podcasts like “Serial” and television series like Netflix’s “Making a Murderer” have sparked the morbid curiosity in listeners and viewers alike.

Plus, there’s even great fictional content out there like “True Detective” on HBO (not Season 2, however).

If these shows speak to the inner investigator in you, here are 10 more offerings from Netflix that you’re definitely going to want to check out.

#10. “Inside the Criminal Mind”

Image Credit: Netflix

This original series enlists the help of neurologists and criminologists to examine how some of the world’s most infamous killers, cultists, or kidnappers might have become that way.

#9. “The Investigator”

Image Credit: Netflix

This British crime drama follows a researcher who delves into a series of unsolved murders. The first season deals with the case of a woman who disappeared, but the police never found her body.

#8. “The Staircase”

Image Credit: Netflix

This documentary-style series follows the events that take place after a crime novelists’ wife is found dead at the bottom of the stairs in her home. It will surely be fun to play private detective as you try to figure out whether he did it or whether it was an accident after all.

#7. “I Am a Killer”

Image Credit: Netflix

It doesn’t get any more real than this documentary series, which profiles confessed killers on death row, and delves into the crimes that put them there.

#6. :Evil Genius:

Image Credit: Netflix

Another documentary — this one digs into the 2003 attempted bank robbery by a pizza delivery man in Pennsylvania. But that’s only the tip of the iceberg. There are tons of conspiracy theories surrounding “America’s most diabolical bank heist,” so you’ll undoubtedly be kicking around your own ideas for a while after watching.

#5. “The Confession Tapes”

Image Credit: Netflix

If you believe that only guilty people confess, you might feel differently after listening to these real life confessions. The criminals who made them claim to this day that they were forced into their guilty pleas.

#4. “Nurses Who Kill”

Image Credit: Netflix

This documentary series outlines true stories of nurses obsessed with killing instead of curing. Fair warning:  you might think twice about checking yourself into the hospital after watching.

#3. “Murderous Affairs”

Image Credit: Netflix

There are entire series dedicated to murderous spouses on various cable channels, but this documentary follows what happens when extramarital affairs go horribly wrong.

#2. “The Keepers”

Image Credit: Netflix

This documentary series follows the murder of nun Catherine Cesnik, and eventually peels the layers back to reveal the long, covered up history of sexual abuse within the Catholic church.

#1. “Flint Town”

Image Credit: Netflix

Flint, Michigan has way more problems than just their poisoned water supply. Sadly, many of them stem from the fact that their police force — which is responsible for 100,000 residents — consists of only 98 officers. This documentary series follows the Flint police as they interact with the community they’ve sworn to serve.

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These 15 Pictures Will Make Millennials Miss the Good Old Days

Technology is a lot different today than it was 10-20 years ago, which means that those of us who are fairly young — say, mid-twenties to mid-thirties — still remember the days when things were so much simpler (aka less connected). If that describes you, then these 15 photos will bring back the peace and quiet of those good old days that were really just a decade ago.

#15. Blocking people was simple — and they always knew.

Image Credit: Twitter

#14. You could just keep playing until you got the future you wanted.

Image Credit: Twitter

#13. It was impossible to spoil movies as long as your friends didn’t suck.

Image Credit: Mognet Central

#12. This was the biggest stress — and win — of your week.

Image Credit: Twitter

#11. Finding your friends was as easy as this choice:

Image Credit: Twitter

#10. You could log out of IM and your friends had no way to get in touch with you.

#9. No technology was required for this question.

Image Credit: WordPress

#8. When birthday parties were awesome no matter which place you picked.

Image Credit: Twitter

#7. You could just rip up pictures you wanted to hide forever.

Image Credit: Pixabay

#6. All you needed to feel accomplished was passing a note that didn’t get confiscated.

Image Credit: AlisonDeluca/Blogspot

#5. When completing your Happy Meal set made your week.

Image Credit: Kids Time

#4. And taking vitamins was fun.

Image Credit: Twitter

#3. Everyone knew this was the best day in gym class.

Image Credit: Walmart

#2. And this was the best day in any other class.

Image Credit: Twitter

#1. When the most annoying thing about Facebook was the pokes.

Image Credit: Facebook

Anyone invented time travel yet? No? I’ll keep waiting.

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7+ Frightening Facts About George A. Romero’s ‘Night of the Living Dead’

George A. Romero’s 1968 masterpiece Night of the Living Dead is a landmark of modern cinema. Without it, we may not have recent hits like 28 Days Later or The Walking Dead

Night of the Living Dead turns 50 this year, and in honor of the low-budget masterpiece that changed the face of horror films, here are some facts about the film.

1. The original ideas were quite different

Photo Credit: Janus Films

Imagine this: the original idea for Night of the Living Dead was for the film to be an alien comedy. In 1967, Romero, writer John A. Russo, and actor Rudy Rucci all worked at a commercial film company in Pittsburgh called Latent Image. The three men thought they should try their hand at making a feature film.

Russo suggested a film about hot-rodding teenage aliens that visit Earth and cause trouble with the help of a pet from outer space. That idea wouldn’t work due to budget constraints, so Russo came up with an idea about a runaway boy who stumbles upon a field of corpses under glass that were rotting and would be consumed by aliens. Romero liked the flesh-eating angle but ditched the rest.

2. Romero was heavily inspired by I Am Legend

Romero admitted that he basically “ripped off” Richard Matheson’s horror novel I Am Legend, combining it with the flesh-eating angle that Russo had come up with. Romero came up with about 40 pages that Russo loved, including the opening in the cemetery, and then went to work on the script that would eventually become Night of the Living Dead.

3. Everything, including the blood, was made on the cheap

Photo Credit: Janus Films

Night of the Living Dead was made for less than $150,000, so everything needed to be done cheaply. This included the blood for the film. Because the film was shot in black and white, red ink and chocolate syrup were both used for blood onscreen. In the scene where Kyra Schon ate her father’s corpse, they used leftover crew lunches of hamburgers and meatball sandwiches smeared with chocolate syrup.

4. An error caused the film to be in the public domain

The film is in the public domain, but only because of a big mistake. The film’s distributors wanted to release it under the title Night of the Flesh Eaters. There was a 1964 film called The Flesh Eaters, and lawyers associated with that film threatened to sue.

The title ended up being changed to Night of the Living Dead. Editors did not add copyright notices to the beginning or end credits of the film, so, even though Romero and his team have fought in court, the film remains in the public domain.

5. Romero and Russo made cameos

Director Romero and writer Russo both appear in Night of the Living Dead. Russo played a zombie that got hit with a tire iron and Romero portrayed a reporter in the Washington, D.C. scenes.

6. One actor fought against an alternative ending

Photo Credit: Janus Films

Duane Jones played Ben, the African-American hero of the film. Ben survives the night but is shot dead by a posse and tossed into a fire. Jones fought against a happier ending.

Jones said: “I convinced George that the black community would rather see me dead than saved, after all that had gone on, in a corny and symbolically confusing way. The heroes never die in American movies. The jolt of that, and the double jolt of the hero being black seemed like a double-barreled whammy.”

7. Fire!

Three people set themselves on fire during the making of the film. The infamous cemetery zombie, played by actor Bill Hinzman, and writer John A. Russo both volunteered to be set on fire to make the zombie attack scenes more realistic. Both of their fire scenes went according to plan.

One unexpected fire occurred when a crew member named Gary Streiner added more fuel to a chair that needed to be set on fire for a scene. A hot ember ended up in his gas can and set Streiner on fire. He was not seriously hurt.

8. Duane Jones rewrote his own dialogue

Photo Credit: Janus Films

The character of Ben was originally written as a truck driver with a rough personality, but Jones revised his dialogue to reflect how he felt the character should be played.

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Did Candy Corn Really Used to be Chicken Feed?

Candy corn: people either love it or hate it. However you feel about the classic Halloween treat, I bet you don’t know where it came from, do you? You might think that it’s just little pieces of sugar shaped like corn, but the truth is way more surprising.

Photo Credit: Unsplash,Dane Deaner

The origins of the candy are a little spotty, but it seems to date to the 1880s, when candy companies made mellowcreme into all kinds of shapes, including pumpkins, turnips, and various agricultural products. At that time, farmers made up about half of American workers, so companies geared their candy toward kids who lived on farms.

Photo Credit: Flickr,Juushika Redgrave

Wunderle was the first company to sell the multi-colored candy corn, but the Goelitz Candy Company was the first to popularize the now ubiquitous treat, around 1889. Goelitz marketed candy corn as “Chicken Feed” because before World War I most Americans didn’t eat corn, it was strictly for farm animals.

During the lean years of WWI, wheat shortages caused many Americans to begin using corn-related foods as a cooking staple. After the war and until the 1950s, candy corn became known as a “penny candy” that kids (and adults with a sweet tooth) could buy in bulk. And it wasn’t strictly associated with Halloween. People also ate candy corn at Thanksgiving and Easter.

It wasn’t until the 1950s that Halloween became more and more dominated by and associated with candy. That’s also when companies began advertising candy corn around Halloween.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Today, the National Confectioners Association estimates that 35 million pounds of candy corn are sold every year. But you better believe a good chunk of those sales come in October.

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Even More Spooky Ghost Stories from Across the United States

No matter where you grew up, there were likely some urban legends and spooky stories that everyone knew. Maybe they were about that old abandoned house that no one ever dared get too close to. Or perhaps they were about the woods where someone went missing many years ago.

Every state and every community has those delightfully scary stories, and here are 10 of the creepiest from different states.

1. Alabama

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Some of the people who boarded the ship Eliza Battle in February 1858 had no idea that they would never get off the doomed vessel. On March 1, the ship that was bound for Mobile and was loaded with cotton bales caught fire and 33 passengers and crew members died.

People say that sometimes you can see the burning Eliza Battle rise from the Tombigbee River, trying to make it all the way to its final destination.

2. Nebraska

Photo Credit: Public Domain

If you dare to venture to Blackbird Hill in Nebraska on October 17, listen closely to see if you hear a woman screaming at the top of the hill. The voice belongs to a woman who was murdered by her jealous husband. The man stabbed his wife and jumped from the cliff. Spoooooooky.

3. Indiana

Photo Credit: Flickr,w.marsh

The town of Tunnelton got its name from all the railroad tunnels that surround it. The one called “The Big Tunnel” in town is supposedly haunted by a man who was beheaded during the construction of the structure.

Another ghost known to roam the tunnel is Henry Dixon, a watchman who was murdered there in 1908. His murder was never solved, and some believe that Dixon roams the eerie tunnel seeking justice.

4. Iowa

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Located in Cedar Rapids, Coe College is said to be haunted by a student named Helen Esther Roberts, who died during the 1918 flu pandemic. Roberts used to haunt Voorhees Hall, where she lived, and is thought to live in an old grandfather clock.

Students claim to have seen a ghost while the clock was being installed, a ghost that pulls the covers off of their beds and even plays the piano in the lobby on occasion. Others claim that the clock sometimes stops working at 2:53, the time when Roberts died. The clock was moved to Stuart Hall in the 1970s, and that’s where Roberts now plies her ghostly trade.

5. Maine

Of course the home state of Stephen King has a haunted lighthouse. It’s located on Seguin Island, two miles off the coast of Maine. The legend says that a lighthouse keeper and his wife moved into the structure in the mid-1800s and that the man had a piano and sheet music delivered from the mainland so his wife could play.

The wife learned one song and played it over and over, eventually driving her husband insane. The lighthouse keeper smashed the piano to bits with an axe before he murdered his wife: he then took his own life. Visitors say they sometimes still hear the ghostly song being played, or that they see the lighthouse keeper walking around carrying an axe. Is that a Stephen King story, or what?!?

6. Michigan

Photo Credit: Unsplash,Henry Desro

If you happen to be near the town of Saugatuck in western Michigan, beware of the Melon Heads. Local folklore tells us that these creatures with small bodies and oversized heads haunt the woods around the town.

Some believe the Melon Heads were 19th-century children who suffered from hydrocephaly that made their heads swell and that a local hospital was conducting terrifying experiments on them. The little haunters are said to tap on car windows (especially if you’re parked and gettin’ it on).

7. Arkansas

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

During the battle of Poison Spring in April 1864, Union General Frederick Steele took over the home of a mailman named John Chidester to use as his headquarters. Chidester was thought to be a Confederate spy, and Union troops fired into the walls where they believed the man was hiding in a closet. Chidester fled to Texas, but the bullet holes can still be seen in the home.

Some believe that Chidester’s ghost still haunts the home, telling unwanted visitors to “Get Out!”

8. North Carolina

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Edward Teach, better known as the famous pirate Blackbeard, reportedly haunts a cove on Ocracoke Island on North Carolina’s Outer Banks. After his capture, Blackbeard was beheaded and his head was displayed on a British ship. His body was thrown to the sea.

An area known as Teach’s Hole is known to be haunted by a headless body splashing around in the water. Some other people say Blackbeard haunts the area with a lantern, searching for his lost head.

9. Oregon

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The Kuhn Cinema in Lebanon, Oregon has been around since 1936. Locals say that a teenager once plummeted to her death from the theater’s second balcony and has haunted the joint ever since. Some even say that her image occasionally flickers onto the screen, terrifying viewers. Keep ahold of that popcorn.

10. Wisconsin

Photo Credit: Flickr,Al

There’s something very strange happening at Riverside Cemetery in Appleton. The tombstone of a woman named Kate “Kitty” Blood is said to ooze, you guessed it, blood. One rumor says that Blood was murdered by her husband. Another says that she was a witch.

The truth is that Blood died from tuberculosis at the age of 23. But her creepy name and the isolated location of her tombstone has become part of the local lore in Appleton.

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Here Are 10 of the Spookiest Ghost Stories from the United States

When you have a country with as many states as the USA, you are bound to have plenty of spooky ghost stories from all over.

So, here are 10 of the spookiest ghost stories from different parts of the U.S.

1. Alaska

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The Golden North Hotel in Skagway is the setting for Alaska’s creepiest ghost tale. Legend has it that a woman named Mary moved into the hotel during the Klondike Gold Rush with her fiancé, a man who went by the moniker “Klondike Ike.”

Ike set off to prospect gold and find fame and fortune, but he never returned from the rugged Alaskan wilderness. Mary locked herself in her hotel room and waited for her beau. Eventually, hotel workers broke down Mary’s door and found her dead in the room wearing her wedding dress. The story goes that “Scary Mary” still roams the halls, occasionally checking in on hotel guests to make sure Ike isn’t bedding down with anyone else.

2. California

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

What place beside the infamous Alcatraz prison would make this list for California? The foreboding island prison in San Francisco Bay operated from 1934-1963 and housed the likes of Al Capone and James “Whitey” Bulger behind its walls.

The most famous ghost to roam Alcatraz’s hallowed grounds is a prisoner who once called cell 14D his home. Apparently, the prisoner screamed all night, claiming that a ghastly creature with glowing eyes was trying to kill him. The guards ignored his cries, and the next morning the inmate was found strangled to death. A doctor said the injuries could not have been self-inflicted and that the man had strange wounds on his neck.

3. Kansas

Photo Credit: YouTube

The sand hills surrounding Hutchinson are known to be creepy as hell and for good reason: a creature known as the Hamburger Man is rumored to haunt the hills, looking for a fresh kill.

Rumor has it that the local legend is only partially man or perhaps survived a horrific accident and is mutilated beyond belief. One thing is for certain: the Hamburger Man is said to carry a large knife and he likes to abduct people and eat them for dinner. Chew on that one for a little while…

4. Georgia

Photo Credit: Flickr,Peter Salanki

Lake Lanier in Georgia is said by locals to be cursed. The Army Corps of Engineers flooded nearly 60 square miles of homes, farmland, and businesses in the 1950s to create the large lake. Cemeteries were relocated to accommodate the project.

Freak accidents and mysterious drownings have plagued the lake and some people who have almost died in the waters have described being pulled underneath by a phantom force.

5. Idaho

Photo Credit: Flickr,DieselDemon

The spooky Old Idaho Penitentiary operated from 1872-1973 and housed more than 13,000 prisoners over 100 years. One of the most notorious inmates to call the jail home was Raymond Allen Snowden, who was known as “Idaho’s Jack the Ripper.”

Snowden was executed in the jail in 1957 and died a slow, painful death. His neck didn’t break when the rope dropped, and it took 15 minutes for Snowden to suffocate. It’s rumored that the killer haunts the premises. Visitors to the jail have described hearing strange sounds and voices and being overcome by extreme sadness.

6. Illinois

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Growing up near Chicago, I learned about the story of Resurrection Mary at a young age…and it always haunted me. The legend of the ghost says that during the Great Depression, a young woman named Mary went a dance hall near Chicago. Mary got into an argument with her boyfriend and decided to walk home along Archer Avenue, where she was killed by a hit-and-run driver.

Mary was buried in nearby Resurrection Cemetery and generations of Chicagoans have reported seeing a young girl in a white dress hitchhiking along Archer Avenue late at night. Sometimes she’s even picked up but disappears from the back seat before reaching her final destination: Resurrection Cemetery.

7. Colorado

Photo Credit: pxhere

The Buffalo Rose Saloon in Golden is said to be haunted by a young girl who drowned in a swimming pool in the saloon’s basement in the 1920s. The spirit of the girl is said to still roam the hallways and skip up and down stairs.

An employee who works nights at the bar described the basement where the pool was located as “very bad. Sometimes you can’t go [down] there.”

8. Louisiana

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The swampy lands of Louisiana are ripe for ghost stories. One legend comes from the state’s Cajun communities and centers around cauchemar: witches that arrive at night, immobilize people in their beds, and ride them like horses. Seriously. Think sleep paralysis but way more terrifying.

Even if a person attempts to scream while being attacked by a cauchemar, it’s no use: the scream can never escape someone’s throat. People have reported having marks and bruises from where a cauchemar beats them a whip. Creepy indeed.

9. Minnesota

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

The Palmer House Hotel in Sauk Centre attracts ghost hunters from all over the country. A prostitute named Lucy was rumored to have worked in a brothel where the hotel now stands.

Lucy and other women died in a tragic fire at the brothel, and Lucy is not happy with men in the afterlife. So she’s taken to haunting the Palmer House, naturally. Lucy is known to slam doors and make the temperature drop drastically when a man is present. Apparently, Room 17 is her favorite haunt.

10. Montana

Photo Credit: iStock

We already covered Resurrection Mary, but another creepy hitchhiker from haunted lore is the Phantom Hitchhiker of Black Horse Lake. If you happen to drive along Highway 87, you might see a Native American man wearing a jean jacket appear out of nowhere and smash into your windshield.

Locals say the man died when he was hit by a car and has been reenacting the traumatic scene ever since. Keep your eyes peeled…

The post Here Are 10 of the Spookiest Ghost Stories from the United States appeared first on UberFacts.

Someone Call Charlie Brown, Cuz This is the Largest Pumpkin Ever

A man in New Hampshire recently set a new record for the largest pumpkin ever grown in North America! If that doesn’t get you excited for Fall, then we don’t know what will!

Steve Geddes broke the record last month at the Deerfield Fair in New Hampshire. Geddes’ massive prize weighed a whopping 2,528 pounds, shattering the previous record.

Photo Credit: Facebook,Deerfield Fair

Geddes won $6,000 in prize money for his behemoth.

Photo Credit: Facebook,Deerfield Fair

Even though pumpkins are extremely American (at least I think they are), the largest one ever grown in the world is actually from Belgium back in 2016. That monster weighed 2,624 pounds. Let’s hope Mr. Geddes keeps growing pumpkins and brings that title back to the USA where it belongs!

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12+ Discontinued Products That We Hope Make a Big Comeback

Remember Jello Pudding Pops? How about Ecto Cooler?

We all have products from our past and our childhoods that we wish would make comebacks in a huge way. Here are 15 that we’re hoping hit the shelves again sooner than later.

1. Pudding Pops

Photo Credit: Reddit

2. Planters Cheez Balls

Photo Credit: Reddit

3. Sour Altoids

Photo Credit: Reddit

4. Creme Savers

Photo Credit: Reddit

5. Clearly Canadian

Photo Credit: Reddit

6. Ecto Cooler

Photo Credit: Reddit

7. Wendy’s Spicy Chicken Nuggets

Photo Credit: Reddit

8. Snapple Elements

Photo Credit: Reddit

9. Fruitopia

10. Coke with Lime

Photo Credit: Reddit

11. Sprite Re-Mix

12. Swoops

13. Cereal Straws

14.

15. Butterfinger BB’s


So what do you all say?!? Let’s get some campaigns going so we can get these products back in our hands!

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