That's about as close as you're gonna get without getting the actual correct answer, so I'm giving it to you.
John Tyler was born during George Washington's presidency.
Harrison Tyler is John Tyler's grandson. No, not great great great grandson. Just grandson, as in, John Tyler, born in the late 1700s, was his Daddy's Daddy.
Both being able to pass on genes at that age while appealing to women who can still have a kid is probably more notable about passing on than being the last descendant of John Tyler (if he actually had been, of course, since that wasn't exactly the answer.)
I need to think of something interesting, if possible.
Ok, for lack of anything funny, here's another one WordPup can answer, IIRC.
All of you have heard of the famous "Boston Tea Party." Most people know a few details. I'm curious if you know all the main details (as I see them, at least.) So, please answer all parts....
A) Where did it take place? (More specific than "what city".)
B) How did the rebelling colonists dress for it?
C) What TWO commodities did it involve?
D) What did the colonists do with EACH commodity?
I'm guessing you can all answer A & B but probably not C &D IN FULL.
Then again, perhaps you will surprise me- it's happened before.
The tea-dumping was a protest against the Stamp Act. The revolutionaries might have destroyed the British tax stamps, but I wouldn't call those a commodity.
Considering the actual answers, that's pretty close.
They found tea and MOLASSES on board.
They dumped the tea, and they kept the molasses..... which was used to make rum!
There was a sequence of trade. Kidnap Africans as slaves, dump them onto farms, grow molasses, bring the molasses to the 13 colonies, process it to rum, then ship the rum to the UK. In this case, they kept the rum and drank it themselves (hardly the first time they'd drunk rum...)
There was a sequence of trade. Kidnap Africans as slaves, dump them onto farms, grow molasses, bring the molasses to the 13 colonies, process it to rum, then ship the rum to the UK. In this case, they kept the rum and drank it themselves (hardly the first time they'd drunk rum...)
Reminds me of the show-stopper "Molasses to Rum" in the musical "1776." Edward Rutledge points out the hypocrisy of the northern states in railing against slavery when the North was using slaves as part of a trade cycle with the South and Europe.
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GeorgeStGeorge
No. (Misread it.) George
WordWolf
Raf clears the table! (Been practicing billiards lately?) A) 1605 was the last time- before JP1- that there were 3 different Popes in the same calendar year. It has to coincide with the concl
Human without the bean
Don't forget about me Raf, I'm so petty too. From "Wildflowers" to "The Last DJ".
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modcat5
That's about as close as you're gonna get without getting the actual correct answer, so I'm giving it to you.
John Tyler was born during George Washington's presidency.
Harrison Tyler is John Tyler's grandson. No, not great great great grandson. Just grandson, as in, John Tyler, born in the late 1700s, was his Daddy's Daddy.
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GeorgeStGeorge
Obviously, long life is in their genes...
George
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modcat5
Actually, having the hots for childbearing women while in their 80s is the trait that was passed on, I think.
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WordWolf
Both being able to pass on genes at that age while appealing to women who can still have a kid is probably more notable about passing on than being the last descendant of John Tyler (if he actually had been, of course, since that wasn't exactly the answer.)
I need to think of something interesting, if possible.
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WordWolf
In 1902, there were two cars in the entire state of Ohio. That's not the notable part. What's so notable about the 2 cars?
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GeorgeStGeorge
They were foreign cars?
George
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Raf
They
he he
the two cars
lolol
they, um
BWAAAAHAHAHAHA!!!
I can't. I can't.
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WordWolf
AFAIK, they were not. If they were, I guarantee that's not what's notable about these 2 specific cars.
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Raf
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Raf
They crashed into each other*!!
BWWAAAAAAAAhahahahahahahahaha!
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WordWolf
CORRECT! In 1902, there were 2 cars in the state of Ohio. They collided!
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GeorgeStGeorge
George
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Raf
For anyone who noticed the asterisk, I'm pretty sure this story is a myth.
It's a cool one, though.
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WordWolf
*checks* Aw, fudge. I read that one in the late 1970s, IIRC.
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GeorgeStGeorge
At any rate, Raf's up.
George
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modcat5
Conan O'Brien used to conduct seances summoning the spirit of this actor, who had not yet died.
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WordWolf
Has to be some of the mileage he got out of ABE VIGODA.
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modcat5
I miss that guy.
You're up.
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WordWolf
Ok, for lack of anything funny, here's another one WordPup can answer, IIRC.
All of you have heard of the famous "Boston Tea Party." Most people know a few details. I'm curious if you know all the main details (as I see them, at least.) So, please answer all parts....
A) Where did it take place? (More specific than "what city".)
B) How did the rebelling colonists dress for it?
C) What TWO commodities did it involve?
D) What did the colonists do with EACH commodity?
I'm guessing you can all answer A & B but probably not C &D IN FULL.
Then again, perhaps you will surprise me- it's happened before.
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GeorgeStGeorge
A) Boston Harbor
B) As Indians
C) Tea and tobacco (?)
D) Dumped the tea in the harbor, burned the tobacco (?)
George
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WordWolf
A) Correct. B) Correct. C) Half-right. D) Half-right.
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GeorgeStGeorge
The tea-dumping was a protest against the Stamp Act. The revolutionaries might have destroyed the British tax stamps, but I wouldn't call those a commodity.
Whiskey or rum? (If so, probably consumed!)
George
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WordWolf
Considering the actual answers, that's pretty close.
They found tea and MOLASSES on board.
They dumped the tea, and they kept the molasses..... which was used to make rum!
There was a sequence of trade. Kidnap Africans as slaves, dump them onto farms, grow molasses, bring the molasses to the 13 colonies, process it to rum, then ship the rum to the UK. In this case, they kept the rum and drank it themselves (hardly the first time they'd drunk rum...)
George's turn.
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GeorgeStGeorge
Reminds me of the show-stopper "Molasses to Rum" in the musical "1776." Edward Rutledge points out the hypocrisy of the northern states in railing against slavery when the North was using slaves as part of a trade cycle with the South and Europe.
New one shortly.
George
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