The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

  • Hi Guest - Did you know?
    Hot Topics is a Safe for Work (SFW) forum.

Little known facts

1938 - Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre on the Air presented their radio play The War of the Worlds based upon H. G. Wells's novel; and, scared the bejeebers out of East Coast residents

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/hist...io-broadcast-was-magnificent-fluke-180955180/


It was because of the angst among residents that radio stations were required thereafter to identify their call letters and frequency on the hour and half hour; and, drama presentations had to notify listeners that any news bulletins, etc. broadcast during the presentation were dramatizations, not real breaking news alerts.
 
^ You mean "little publicized mysteries": you are admitting yourself that we do not even know what original "fact" we should be discussing.

No, we have quite a lack of facts with any explanatory value. We know who showed up where fairly well; what we don't know is where most of them came from or why -- the mysteries exist because of the lack of facts.

A bit learned recently reminds of a little known fact:

The name of one of the major islands in the Mediterranean, Cyprus, means "copper": it was named for its primary export in the twelfth century B.C.
 
No, we have quite a lack of facts with any explanatory value. We know who showed up where fairly well; what we don't know is where most of them came from or why -- the mysteries exist because of the lack of facts.

A bit learned recently reminds of a little known fact:

The name of one of the major islands in the Mediterranean, Cyprus, means "copper": it was named for its primary export in the twelfth century B.C.

Do not ramble: it was only about which "fact" concerning the Sea Peoples we would be considering :rolleyes:
 
The name of one of the major islands in the Mediterranean, Cyprus, means "copper": it was named for its primary export in the twelfth century B.C.

This is the 'Little known facts' thread, not the 'Contested scientific theories' thread...
 
Last edited:
^ Fake facts are facts too :lol:

Unknown.jpeg
 
This is the 'Little known facts' thread, not the 'Contested scientific theories' thread...

The meaning of the word "cyprus" has nothing to do with any scientific theories, it's fact. For that matter, the identity and motives of the sea peoples have nothing to do with scientific theories, either.
 
I'm reading Roman Polanski's autobiography "Roman" and in the chapter where he talks about the filming of "Chinatown" there is an amusing story about Faye Dunaway. It seems that while trying to get a particular shot....wait, I'll let Roman tell the story:

Makeup wasn't my only problem with Faye. The hesitations and pauses that characterized her delivery were born of necessity, not art. They were her way of trying to remember what she had to say next, since she seldom knew her lines and was always pestering me to rewrite them. Things reached the stage where simply to save time, I agreed to all her suggestions on principle. Almost invariably, she's end by saying, "You know maybe it was better the way it was" -- and we'd revert to the original script.

Faye's insecurity was such that every time I dropped some insignificant line of hers in the interest of polishing a sequence, she took it as an affront and accused me of mutilating her part. The whole thing came to head in a scene where she and Jack Nicholson meet in a restaurant after he's had his nose slashed. The camera was over her shoulder, and one strand her hair was catching the light. It was one of those freak situations where, if nothing were done, the audience's attention would be focused on one single strand of hair.

"Cut," I said, and summoned Faye's hairdresser. In total silence, with the lights still burning, she did her beat to flatten the rebellious hair. It popped up again and again. No amount of lacquer seemed to do the trick. Faye, being the only person on the set who couldn't see what was wrong, couldn't understand what all of the fuss was about. At last, hoping she might not even notice, I took the hair and plucked it put.

Howard Koch yelled "Lunch break, everybody!" in attempt to diffuse an explosive situation. It didn't work. Faye, who can swear like a teamster truck driver, was having a fit. "I don't believe it!" She screamed. "I just don't believe it! The motherfucker just pulled my hair out!" Her hysterics were earsplitting, obscene, and only in their early stages. After lunch she let it be known that she wasn't coming back on the set.

That one little hair provided the kind of crisis directors dread and producers and agents secretly revel in. Before it started, Bob Evans had reminded me that he hadn't wanted "that meshuga" in the first place. I was stuck with "The Dreaded Dunaway", as she was unofficially known and would have to take the consequences.

A meeting began with Freddy Fields, Faye's agent, looking uncomfortable and Faye herself still mad as hell. Fields started enumerating her many grievances against me. I'd been cast in the now familiar role of monster. "I was wrong to do it," I told him, "But that doesn't change the fact that she's nut and a menace."

This sent Faye into such a paroxysm of foulmouthed abuse that neither Evans nor Fields knew where to look. I was delighted. That's the way she is, I gestured behind her back, grinning slyly. Freddie Fields diplomatically saved the day with much soothing talk about the need for the show to go on. Faye had shot her wad. The psychodrama had done her good, and anyway, she'd exhausted her vocabulary. We resumed the over-the-shoulder shot as if nothing had happened.
 
Re: Little know facts

Especially for Hallowe'en: Graveyards & Cemeteries

Although the terms 'graveyard' and 'cemetery' are used interchangeably, there is a difference. A graveyard is part of a church yard and is used for burials of that church's parishioners. A cemetery is a private piece of land which is not affiliated with any church or religion that is used for burial.
 
Some parts of canada is farther south than the northernmost part of California

- - - Updated - - -

The average number of arms is less than 2!!
 
Back
Top