User:MrPersonHumanGuy

Highlights
I don't mean to brag, but by that, I mean... I completely mean to brag!
 * Late 2020: I expand the List of children's animated television series. Afterwards, another editor comes along and expands it even further, causing the list article to become so long that it gets split by decade.
 * Q2 2022: I expand the table in the Future section of Detailed logarithmic timeline.
 * March 23, 2023: I create Template:Roman months and put it beneath each article for, well, the Roman months.
 * December 25, 2023: The draft for The Scale of the Universe is accepted within hours of my first submission.
 * February 26, 2024: Before it could be reviewed a second time, I decide to take back my second submission and move the draft for Nickelodeon and LGBT representation into the mainspace myself.
 * April 18, 2024: I create the disambiguation page Thermal Maximum.

Best questions and answers at the reference desk

 * March 2021: In one episode of the Animaniacs reboot, Yakko says "Croik misseur! Croik misseur! Croiks of all kinds!". What does he mean by "croik misseur"?
 * He may have been referring to a dish called croque monsieur.


 * May 2021: Why is the Babylon allegory from the Book of Revelation called the 5-letter W word that rhymes with chore?
 * That word is a translation of the Greek word πόρνη (pornē) which means prostitute. It was also a figure of speech for an idolatress, and in the context of Revelation, Babylon is used as an allegory for Rome, which was considered the chief seat of idolatry.


 * August 2021: How far back has something along the lines of "better forgiveness than permission" been said?
 * The phrase "It's easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission." was popularized by Grace Hopper, though it goes at least as far back as 1846 with an unclear reference to Francesco Barberini.


 * December 2022: Each of the "games for you from the web" featured on Windows 10's Start menu had an infinity symbol with 5 colors on its thumbnail. What was that about?
 * That is the logo of FRVR, a marketing-focused games company.


 * January 2023: What does I like your cut g mean?
 * Cut means haircut and g is short for gangster, though this particular phrase could be a variation of the older saying "I like the cut of your jib".


 * April 2023: What's with the extremely long YouTube comments that start off with something like "I'm currently crying so hard right now"?
 * Each comment of this sort may have have been the work of a bot or program.


 * June 2023: My mouse sometimes treats one click as a double-click. As it turns out, my mouse button occasionally fails to hold for split-seconds unless I press down on it hard. Why does it act this way?
 * This is often caused by dirt getting in the way of the actuator. If it bothers you, you may as well buy a new mouse or, if you use Windows, try something called AutoHotkey.
 * P.S. When the mouse I use has this problem, I sometimes end up in an edit conflict with myself where it tells me that I'm trying to revert the edit I just made. On the other hand, this problem with holding clicks can be useful for grinding games (e.g. Cookie Clicker) where I would have to click the same thing over and over again, in which cases I would attempt to gently hold the button so I could effectively play a game more quietly.


 * September 2023: What does chille tid mean?
 * Chilletid is a Danish and Norwegian Bokmål word that roughly translates to "chilling time". It's also a play on the phrase "chill a tad".


 * November 2023: What is this "I know what you want girl" song that is used in those unoriginal world flag map videos with VHS-like effects?
 * "all i want is you" by Rebzyyx


 * November 2023: What does fanum tax mean?
 * Fanum is a Twitch streamer who refers to the food he takes from others as his "tax", hence the phrase.


 * March 2024: What would lead someone to say e.g. "I am living in Paris since 1992" when they're supposed to say "I have lived in Paris since 1992"?
 * That misuse of the word since is reminiscent of how someone in Continental Europe might phrase their sentences. For example, "I live in Paris since four years" is a way to mistranslate the French phrase "J'habite à Paris depuis quatre ans".

2023
At the Science reference desk, I asked for the abbreviation to the provisional name of a hypothetical element of atomic number 717 and got the answer I expected.

2024
In an effort to attempt to outdo myself, I started a joke RfC at the talk page for the lightbulb essay. However, a bunch of AfD ideas would come to me throughout the day, leading me to pretend to nominate these pages:
 * Scorpion (Mortal Kombat)


 * United States customary units


 * Constantinople


 * Sovereign citizen movement


 * Linguistic purism in English


 * Rescue helicopter


 * Lovecraftian horror


 * Robbie Rotten


 * Kappa (folklore)


 * Phineas and Ferb


 * Borg and Cybermen


 * Attack on Titan


 * Dream Island


 * Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Phineas and Ferb: The Soundtrack


 * Mr. Greg

2025
This page contains content transcluded from User:MrPersonHumanGuy/April Fools plans.

Articles with ridiculously long titles

 * Captain Underpants and the Invasion of the Incredibly Naughty Cafeteria Ladies from Outer Space (and the Subsequent Assault of the Equally Evil Lunchroom Zombie Nerds)
 * Lopado­temacho­selacho­galeo­kranio­leipsano­drim­hypo­trimmato­silphio­karabo­melito­katakechy­meno­kichl­epi­kossypho­phatto­perister­alektryon­opte­kephallio­kigklo­peleio­lagoio­siraio­baphe­tragano­pterygon
 * The Modification and Instrumentation of a Famous Hornpipe as a Merry and Altogether Sincere Homage to Uncle Alfred

Article titles with multiple meanings

 * Batman's Hill: The place where Wayne Manor is situated. Apparently claimed by Captain John Lancey of the USS Enterprise.
 * Cat-sìth: Jedi felines that are aligned with the dark side of the force.
 * CP violation: Whoever is guilty of unleashing an unspeakable evil of this sort is no boy scout. They do things we can't even talk about.
 * End SARS: A movement to eradicate another virus besides polio.
 * Free streaming: The use of a video on demand service without having to pay for it.
 * Inaccessible Island rail: A network of isolated train tracks on a remote island.
 * Mafia Island: A small landmass that the mafia operates from.
 * Marcius Turbo: A turbo-tastically fast garden snail who was ranger prefect of Newtopia the Praetorian Guard as well as a close friend to Anne and Sasha and military advisor to King Andreas . emperors Trajan and Hadrian
 * McDonald Chapel, Alabama: When Chick fil-A is closed, this is where Rev. Ronald McDonald gives his McSermons.
 * Mesoamerican cosmovision: The counterpart to WandaVision.
 * Lushootseed: Something pertaining to seed-shooting.
 * Quintus Caecilius Redditus: Not to be confused with 4chanus or Discordus.
 * Reverend Gadget: A bumbling cyborg pastor who is hired by Father Quimby to go on missions to prevent Dr. Claw from interfering with his church services. Crime never sleeps, not even on Sundays.
 * Stop squark: Objects in motion are closer than they appear . will stay in motion unless acted upon by a supersymmetric quark
 * The Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar, September 1782: A historical event portrayed in Captain Underpants and the Downward Demise of the Dastardly Duracells.

Article prose with multiple meanings I thought would be funny

 * Air Force One photo op incident:
 * Although the planes were engaged in a photo op and training exercise, the citizens of New York and New Jersey had not been informed in advance; some thought it could be the makings of a terrorist attack similar to the September 11 attacks. Some people ran out of buildings while others had extra buildings to spare. When all the buildings were used up, new ones had to be built to meet demand.


 * Alliance Defending Freedom:
 * In Sweden, a midwife, Ellinor Grimmark, sued the province of Jönköping for discrimination because she was refused employment when, citing "freedom of conscience", she refused to give morning-after pills, perform abortions, or put in copper IUDs. She lost both her hearing before the Discrimination Ombudsman, and at the Jönköping district court, prompting her to get a hearing aid and a sign language interpreter.


 * Santa Claus: The Christmas issue of NOAA's Weather Bureau Topics with "Santa Claus" streaking across a weather radar screen, 1958
 * I find it unbelievable that Santa would do such a thing, especially during the winter. Even if all the children are asleep, he should at least put some pants on before he gets on his sleigh, and definitely before going down any chimney. I know the baby Jesus is sometimes shown in his birthday suit, but that doesn't justify such naughty behavior. On the other hand, that would explain why Santa prefers to let kids see him at the mall rather than at their homes on the night before Christmas.

Wacky facts I've found

 * Ganesha in world religions:
 * He is honoured with Motaka, sweets and fruit, when business is good, and he is made ridiculous by putting his picture or statue upside down, when business is down.


 * Maji Maji Rebellion:
 * A spirit medium named Kinjikitile Ngwale, who practiced folk Islam that incorporated animist beliefs, claimed to be possessed by a snake spirit called Hongo. Ngwale began calling himself Bokero and developed a belief that the people of East Africa had been called upon to eliminate the Germans. German anthropologists recorded that he gave his followers war medicine that would turn German bullets into water. This "war medicine" was in fact water (maji in Kiswahili) mixed with castor oil and millet seeds. Empowered with this new liquid, Bokero's followers began what would become known as the Maji Maji Rebellion.
 * German troops, armed with machine guns, departed from Mahenge to the Ngoni camp, which they attacked on 21 October. The Ngoni soldiers retreated, throwing away their bottles of war medicine and crying, "The maji is a lie!"
 * German troops, armed with machine guns, departed from Mahenge to the Ngoni camp, which they attacked on 21 October. The Ngoni soldiers retreated, throwing away their bottles of war medicine and crying, "The maji is a lie!"


 * March on the Pentagon:
 * Not to be dissuaded, Abbie Hoffman vowed to levitate the Pentagon claiming he would attempt to use psychic energy to levitate the Pentagon until it would turn orange and begin to vibrate, at which time the war in Vietnam would end.


 * Ryūjin:
 * One legend involving Ryūjin is the story about how the jellyfish lost its bones. According to this story, Ryūjin wanted to eat monkey's liver (in some versions of the story, to heal an incurable rash), and sent the jellyfish to get him a monkey. The monkey managed to sneak away from the jellyfish by telling him that he had put his liver in a jar in the forest and offered to go and get it. As the jellyfish came back and told Ryūjin what had happened, Ryūjin became so angry that he beat the jellyfish until its bones were crushed.