Wikipedia:Recent additions/2024/June

30 June 2024

 * 00:00, 30 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the Bermuda onion (pictured) was so closely associated with Bermuda that the island's inhabitants became known as "onions"?
 * ... that a U.S. Navy plane piloted by Michael Wettlaufer clipped the tower of a Florida TV station while on a training mission, forcing it off the air for nearly five years?
 * ... that military officer Chris Tanasale was selected as the mayor of Ambon, Indonesia, to prevent the alienation of local Christians?
 * ... that YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim has updated the description of his video "Me at the zoo" on multiple occasions to criticize the website's business decisions?
 * ... that the Nazis killed more than fifty Dutch nationals in retaliation for the assassinations of Hendrik Seyffardt and Hermannus Reydon by the Dutch resistance?
 * ... that fifteen future Pro Football Hall of Fame players have been drafted by the Detroit Lions?
 * ... that a 2007 pop-punk song by Fall Out Boy was named after Michael Jackson's Thriller and begins with a monologue by rapper Jay-Z?
 * ... that the shopping cart is "the ultimate litmus test for whether a person is capable of self-governing", according to the shopping cart theory?
 * ... that a book about book banning was banned?

29 June 2024

 * 00:00, 29 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that after the original Stonewall Inn (modern building pictured) closed in 1969, its space was used by a bagel shop, a Chinese restaurant, and a clothing store?
 * ... that baseball player Shane Rawley has published a novel?
 * ... that the Cat Empire's 2023 album Where the Angels Fall features contributions from 75 musicians and 49 instruments?
 * ... that Sara Houcke began performing in circuses at the age of two as a child clown?
 * ... that a man was denaturalized and deported from the United States for working at a Nazi death camp, despite the courts never holding that he did it willingly?
 * ... that Joy was the sole survivor of the Romanov family's execution?
 * ... that Black Sheep Radio dedicated its first day of programming to a fallen pirate?
 * ... that The Penguin History of Modern China profiled the Christian general whose army moved to the beat of "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing"?
 * ... that in the Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show, the performers scale a 50 ft tree and then free fall?

28 June 2024

 * 00:00, 28 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Arndt Jorgens (pictured) won five World Series despite not playing in a postseason game?
 * ... that 28 trillion tonnes of ice were lost worldwide between 1994 and 2017 due to climate change?
 * ... that Daniel Chapo, the favorite to be the next president of Mozambique, was previously a radio announcer?
 * ... that according to some metaphysicians, there are no relations?
 * ... that William Henry Harrison Seeley was the first American recipient of the Victoria Cross?
 * ... that farmed birds often get marks known as hock burns from the ammonia of other birds' waste?
 * ... that the botanist Victor Jacob Koningsberger spoke out against the expulsion of Jewish academics in the occupied Netherlands?
 * ... that there's a Little Canada on Minnesota State Highway 36?
 * ... that David W. Music has taught music, composed music, conducted music, and written about music?

27 June 2024

 * 00:00, 27 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Clark House (pictured) hosted Cold War meetings?
 * ... that a 2022 book lamented that American painter Edna Hibel did not have a Wikipedia article?
 * ... that there are more than 9,000 swamps in Belarus?
 * ... that before becoming a voice actor, Kenichirou Matsuda attended law school trying to become a civil servant?
 * ... that the first Hindu temple in Wisconsin was built "in the middle of nowhere"?
 * ... that Alan Choe was tasked with developing Queenstown, Singapore's first satellite town, after its British architects left the country in the mid-1950s?
 * ... that Google's Client Hints proposal was initially classified as harmful by Mozilla?
 * ... that Dick Walker discovery of Saturn's moon Epimetheus was only realized twelve years later?
 * ... that Richard Linklater's original concept for Dazed and Confused took place entirely within a car as its characters listened to ZZ Top?

26 June 2024

 * 00:00, 26 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Mel Carnahan (pictured) was the first person to be elected to the United States Senate posthumously?
 * ... that Korean brick toys, colloquially called "Korean Lego", often feature themes of "war and danger", including sets such as military vehicles?
 * ... that stage director and scenic designer Daniela Kerck crafted a new ending to Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot for the 2024 Internationale Maifestspiele?
 * ... that the Oxtongue River, historically a canoe route for indigenous people, is still used for recreational canoeing?
 * ... that Native American studies professor Joely Proudfit has received tenure from three different universities?
 * ... that Metro Boomin unknowingly sampled a song created with generative artificial intelligence in the diss track "BBL Drizzy"?
 * ... that young Erismatopterus formed shoals, likely as a way to avoid predators?
 * ... that Fatimid vizier al-Ma'mun al-Bata'ihi helped empower Caliph al-Amir, only to be later imprisoned and executed by him?
 * ... that due to legal and union restrictions, the production team for the Doctor Who episode "Space Babies" occasionally had to replace real babies with props?

25 June 2024

 * 00:00, 25 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that a Chinese warlord put his car on coinage (pictured), in lieu of his own portrait?
 * ... that the English actor Jude Law is actually named David, a result of his parents naming their children after their best friends?
 * ... that a portrait was attributed to the wrong painter for many years, and the sitter was also misidentified?
 * ... that an AI rendering of the Detroit Sign misled people into thinking that it would be larger than it actually is?
 * ... that bricks laid in Flemish bond were a sign of wealth in colonial Virginia?
 * ... that the communist trade unionist Ditto Pölzl was a member of all three provisional state governments of Styria in 1945?
 * ... that when East Wake Academy opened, its two main school buildings were located four miles (6 km) apart in separate towns?
 * ... that John White shot himself after it was discovered that he had plagiarized a speech by Aaron Burr?
 * ... that within the mixed-reality mode of Homeworld: Vast Reaches, ships seem to fly around the player's room?

24 June 2024

 * 00:00, 24 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that at the 2014 Olympic Games, Yulia Lipnitskaya (pictured) became Russia's youngest-ever Winter Olympic gold medalist?
 * ... that a Utah radio station read books to listeners, a Chapter a Day?
 * ... that Italian pianist and composer Maria Luigia Pizzoli posthumously received the title of Maestro di Contrappunto (master of counterpoint)?
 * ... that because Larrabee County was not established, Iowa remains a state with 99 counties?
 * ... that Yazathingyan Nga Mauk betrayed his brother, Commander Nga Nu, after being promised Nu's wife, Queen Saw Omma, in marriage?
 * ... that climate change in Asia is expected to increase flood risks in the continent's cities, which are already high for 932 million people?
 * ... that the SkyBridge Alternatives Conference has been called the "Super Bowl of hedge funds"?
 * ... that after performing a tour, football club Santa Cruz Futebol Clube had four fewer players, two of them being dead?
 * ... that according to one creationist journal, HIV has its origins in the Fall?

23 June 2024

 * 00:00, 23 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Schoenoplectus triqueter (pictured) can grow up to 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) tall on stems less than half a centimetre (0.20 in) wide?
 * ... that in her musical show Songbird, Regine Velasquez performs one lesser-known song from the featured theme each week?
 * ... that a high jumper took up sprinting to qualify for Kiribati at the 2020 Summer Olympics?
 * ... that playwright Vivian Cosby was hospitalized for three and a half years after lighting herself on fire because of a faulty gas heater?
 * ... that the Creamoata Mill, which once produced a now-nonexistent breakfast food, was listed as Gore's only "place of outstanding historical and cultural influence"?
 * ... that the documentary film I Am Human has been the conversation starter for neuroscience panel discussions at universities such as Harvard?
 * ... that Gabriel André Aucler tried to reestablish paganism after the French Revolution?
 * ... that Alan Kulwicki Memorial Park was partially financed with a US$250,000 donation from Hooters chairman Robert Brooks?

22 June 2024

 * 00:32, 22 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Olympian Ryu Sung-hyun (pictured) taught himself gymnastics for four years because his father did not want him to become an athlete?
 * ... that a nihilist school of metaphysics contends that tables and chairs do not exist?
 * ... that "Sea of Voices" was well-received by Porter Robinson's fans even though it was a fundamental change from his prior musical style?
 * ... that Morris Villarroel wore a camera on his chest that took around 1,200 photographs per day for several years?
 * ... that Seattle Reign FC have had three name changes during their 11-year history?
 * ... that Eric Bloodaxe's death at the Battle of Stainmore ended the independence of Scandinavian York?
 * ... that the legacy of American pianist Ella Scoble Opperman has been said to continue "to entertain and draw attention to Tallahassee" decades after her death?
 * ... that the sheep-farming founder of Kekerengu in New Zealand became an international fugitive?

21 June 2024

 * 00:00, 21 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the Nabisco Shredded Wheat Factory was used as a marketing tool, with an image of the factory (pictured) on every cereal packet it produced until 1960?
 * ... that the sprinter Peter Norman requested that he be left off the Olympic Black Power Statue so that others could stand in his place?
 * ... that a Japanese samurai was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI, nearly 400 years after his execution during the Great Martyrdom of Edo?
 * ... that the Picts disappeared from the historical record after the devastation suffered following the Battle of Dollar?
 * ... that the operators of a Wisconsin radio station received unsolicited checks and food deliveries?
 * ... that the classicist Adam Parry said that he had only ever considered three careers: academia, law and beachcombing?
 * ... that Isaac Watts, the "father of English hymnody", described one of Charles Wesley's hymns as "worth all the verses he himself had written"?
 * ... that a Buddhist android preacher regularly gives sermons on the Heart Sutra?
 * ... that Bills plays for the Bills?

20 June 2024

 * 00:00, 20 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the Amen break (pictured) gained popularity because it offered an easy way to create jungle music?
 * ... that the execution of Burkinabé trade union leader Soumane Touré was prevented by the intervention of his childhood friend, then-president Thomas Sankara?
 * ... that The Amazing Digital Circus is influenced by the short story "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream"?
 * ... that Jaelyn Brown, who was born with two club feet, now plays in the WNBA?
 * ... that the U.S. Department of Labor recorded 583 sitdown strikes in the U.S. between 1936 and 1939, affecting half a million workers?
 * ... that Vasantha Krishna Prasad was the richest candidate from Krishna district to contest the 2019 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election?
 * ... that Megan Abbott receives the most negative letters from readers for The End of Everything?
 * ... that volleyball player Madisen Skinner beat Texas in one national championship final – then won two national championships with Texas?
 * ... that the Gravity Blanket was funded by a crowdfunding campaign which raised more than $4.7 million, despite asking for only $21,500?

19 June 2024

 * 00:00, 19 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the CBeebies presenter George Webster (pictured) has "effervescence, bubbly charm, a quick wit", and "an extra chromosome"?
 * ... that the ancient Homeric Hymns influenced the works of James Joyce, Alfred Hitchcock and Neil Gaiman?
 * ... that Jasprit Bumrah holds the record for scoring the highest number of runs in a single over in Test cricket?
 * ... that the Natives Representative Council held meetings in school halls?
 * ... that Kenji Tanigaki, the action director of Rurouni Kenshin and Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins, began his career as a stuntman on the invitation of action choreographer Stephen Tung?
 * ... that after presenting a televised singing contest won by Sarah Geronimo, Regine Velasquez co-headlined a concert with her?
 * ... that Qin Huasun criticized Taiwan's bid to join the United Nations as a "brazen attempt [...] at splitting a sovereign state"?
 * ... that Don Hutson and Forrest Gregg were the only Green Bay Packers players selected for all three NFL All-Anniversary Teams?
 * ... that Utter served as a Stockholm police horse for more than 23 years, participating in 515 changings of the Royal Guards?

18 June 2024

 * 00:00, 18 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... how salamanders cross the road (pictured)?
 * ... that Joe Shield was the first person from Vermont to be drafted into the NFL and then make a team's roster?
 * ... that codebreaker Emily Anderson was trained to become a Hush WAAC before she joined the British GCHQ?
 * ... that actress Mia Goth was cast as both Pearl and Maxine in X to emphasize the similarities between the two characters?
 * ... that making a manganese nitride in 1894 required a sponge?
 * ... that AI researcher Jan Leike believes "safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products" at OpenAI?
 * ... that Zombie Plane "mercilessly mocks its main stars", according to The Hollywood Reporter?
 * ... that Two Roosters Ice Cream became locally popular after offering odd flavors such as "grilled cheese" and "pizza"?
 * ... that Drake discovered an ancient Chinese city?

17 June 2024

 * 00:00, 17 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that George Kunkel (pictured) portrayed a mountaineer in The Chalice of Courage (1915), the first film to depict assisted suicide?
 * ... that Uhtred became Earl of Bamburgh after his victory at the siege of Durham, even though his father seems to have still been living?
 * ... that Eddie Halliwell was voted into the top 20 of the DJ Mag poll of the most popular disc jockeys for four consecutive years?
 * ... that in the year after its establishment, the provincial legislature of Bali annulled all local laws banning inter-caste marriage?
 * ... that Northwestern women's lacrosse player Izzy Scane led the country in points, missed a season with a torn ACL, then led the country in points again?
 * ... that a 2018 documentary film explores blockchain as a means to give stateless refugees official identities?
 * ... that academic Bunny Mellor served as a secret agent alongside Peter Fleming?
 * ... that the budget for the first season of The Last of Us exceeded that of each of the first five seasons of Game of Thrones?
 * ... that the North Korean propaganda song "Friendly Father" went viral on TikTok, with some users comparing it to songs by ABBA?

16 June 2024

 * 00:00, 16 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that according to legend, the invention of Chinese characters (examples pictured) caused grain to rain from the sky and ghosts and demons to wail in frustration?
 * ... that Alexandru Talex was described as "the gentlest" member of a Romanian far-right organization?
 * ... that "Human Sacrifice", a track on the 2024 album Atavista, could be heard in a 2019 Google Pixel advertisement?
 * ... that a mob in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, detained Jean Pettrequin and searched for Sebastian Zouberbuhler because of a letter?
 * ... that lacrosse player Caitlyn Wurzburger committed to a college program at the age of 14?
 * ... that during the filming of the Doctor Who episode "Boom" some takes lasted up to seven minutes?
 * ... that Mike Gorman spent 43 consecutive years as the television play-by-play commentator for the Boston Celtics?
 * ... that the Armenian Radio jokes are neither about radio nor are they Armenian?

15 June 2024

 * 00:00, 15 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that American abolitionists co-opted the concept of Southern chivalry (caricature pictured) as an insult against pro-slavery white Southerners?
 * ... that Shagdarjavin Natsagdorj remarks at an academic conference led to a communist purge and contributed to the Sino-Soviet split?
 * ... that Pujol and Quintonil are the highest-rated restaurants in Mexico's first Michelin guide, with two Michelin stars each?
 * ... that football player Peter Bowden only started long snapping to help his cousin, a punter, produce film in high school, and both are now in the National Football League?
 * ... that the adjacent Jennings and Sloane Houses comprise New York City's largest single-family residence?
 * ... that Arthur Fulton was a sniper in the First World War and described as "the most famous rifle shot the world has ever known"?
 * ... that the Asyikin–Brugman Treaty was revoked 11 days after being signed?
 * ... that Shirley Warde not only starred in theater and movie productions, but also wrote playscripts and short stories for magazines?
 * ... that in Thailand and Cambodia, cats are used in a procession to ask for rain?

14 June 2024

 * 00:00, 14 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that sisters Talia and Tori DellaPeruta (both pictured), college teammates at North Carolina, play soccer professionally for Sampdoria?
 * ... that, as minister, Simon de Graaff would receive daily shipments of documents by bicycle?
 * ... that the Byzantine Empire's weak defenses around the Lycus valley played a pivotal role in the fall of Constantinople?
 * ... that a graphic novel for teens was among the 10 most challenged books in the United States in 2023?
 * ... that the American band Grupo Frontera collaborated with the media franchise Transformers on a trailer to promote their second studio album?
 * ... that if the Devizes Plot had been successful, 7,000 German prisoners of war would have escaped and attacked RAF Yatesbury?
 * ... that Fredrick Wangabo Mwenengabo, a Congolese-Canadian anthropologist and human rights activist, survived being kidnapped and held for ransom in the Democratic Republic of the Congo?
 * ... that when actress Joanna Lumley spent nine days on an uninhabited island for the 1994 TV show Girl Friday, she made a pair of shoes out of her bra?
 * ... that John Wilson was expelled from the Arkansas House of Representatives for killing another representative in a knife fight, but was then re-elected two years later?

13 June 2024

 * 00:00, 13 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the ZX Spectrum (pictured) is one of the best-selling British computers of all time?
 * ... that Kenneth Odumegwu had never appeared in an organized American football game prior to playing in the NFL?
 * ... that the Doctor Who episode "The Devil's Chord" references the events of an episode that aired more than sixty years before?
 * ... that Rachel Brem discovered a tumor in her own breast while testing ultrasound equipment for her hospital?
 * ... that for her residency Ang Ating Musika, Regine Velasquez performed "two concerts-in-one"?
 * ... that Bianca Babb, a pioneer girl captured by Comanches, described her time among them as "every day seemed to be a holiday", despite the hardships of her initial capture?
 * ... that the two marble statues flanking the Dellwood Cemetery gates represent Mourning and Resurrection?
 * ... that before becoming a comedian, Ola Labib was a pharmacist who had never been inside a pub before her first gig?
 * ... that the idea for Windswept Adan came to Ichiko Aoba after she noticed the translucency of a sea grape?

12 June 2024

 * 00:00, 12 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that two European missionaries stationed in a Catholic church (pictured) were beheaded by Chinese Red Army soldiers led by Mao Zedong in 1935?
 * ... that Felipe Lara Pulitzer finalist Double Concerto turns its soloists into a "many-tentacled creature"?
 * ... that birds have more species than mammals, but are relatively more uniform in appearance?
 * ... that in addition to her popular manga series Delicious in Dungeon, Ryoko Kui has drawn fan art of the games Baldur's Gate, Pathfinder and Planescape: Torment?
 * ... that one Italian broadcaster delayed airing Eurovision Song Contest 1974 by two months to avoid influencing an upcoming divorce law referendum?
 * ... that Irish Gaelic footballer Jude McAtamney became interested in American football after reading a Twitter post in 2020, and became an NFL player in 2024?
 * ... that Tim Robards returned to Neighbours in Episode 8851, two years after he had to quit his role early?
 * ... that Franz Liszt female admirers would fight over his cigar stubs and coffee dregs as souvenirs?

11 June 2024

 * 00:00, 11 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that depictions of Tobias and the Angel (example pictured), unusually for a religious subject, typically show Tobias's dog?
 * ... that Australian gamer Zer0 led his team to an Apex Legends Global Series championship with a substitution teammate to whom he had never spoken before?
 * ... that Louisa May Alcott wrote A Modern Mephistopheles as part of an anonymous series in which readers were meant to guess the author?
 * ... that the first model of cosmic inflation was formulated by a Soviet physicist but initially remained unknown outside the Soviet Union?
 * ... that the Beep the Meep puppet created for "The Star Beast" took six people to operate?
 * ... that football player Levi Drake Rodriguez, considered small for his position, went on an "eat-as-much-as-humanly-possible diet" to be noticed by NFL teams?
 * ... that Macklemore's song "Hind's Hall" refers to Hind Rajab, a six-year-old girl who was killed in the Gaza Strip in January 2024?
 * ... that starting at age 16, future Woolworths CEO Brad Banducci was named top sewing machine salesperson three years in a row?
 * ... that the ancient Greek game polis is one of the world's oldest known strategy games?

10 June 2024

 * 00:00, 10 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Kortnei Johnson (pictured) became a seven-time state sprinting champion for the University Interscholastic League despite training on grass and cement?
 * ... that over the course of several decades, the missionaries of New Zealand's German Mission House failed to convert a single person?
 * ... that all 55 people killed during the Great Genna Martyrdom in 1622 were beatified by Pope Pius IX more than two hundred years later?
 * ... that S'Klallam artist Jeffrey Veregge "Salish Geek" style blended traditional formline art techniques with bright colors and pop culture references?
 * ... that the daimyo of Kumamoto is said to have spent a thousand gold pieces in one night at an Ōsakishimojima teahouse?
 * ... that in 2024, C. J. Hanson became the first player from his school to be chosen in the NFL draft since 1989?
 * ... that the Chinese Red Army housed its political directorate in a Catholic church in 1935?
 * ... that people in Madagascar perform algebra on tree seeds in order to tell the future?

9 June 2024

 * 00:00, 9 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the Circle Tower (pictured), an Art Deco building in Indianapolis, features ziggurat-like upper floors?
 * ... that Jacob Christiaan Koningsberger, a biologist who catalogued the flora and fauna of Java, also served as the Dutch minister of the colonies?
 * ... that researchers submitting to the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy intentionally introduced security bugs into Linux?
 * ... that the Tang dynasty politician Fang Yi'ai, together with his wife Princess Gaoyang, rebelled against Emperor Gaozong of Tang, but their rebellion was swiftly suppressed, resulting in their deaths?
 * ... that El Califa de León is the first Mexican taqueria to be awarded a Michelin star?
 * ... that first-team All-American soccer player Jordynn Dudley holds her high school's basketball scoring record?
 * ... that the Larmanjat guided rail system was successfully demonstrated in England but failed completely when used commercially in Lisbon?
 * ... that during a comedy routine Reuben Solo drew a graph plotting the audience's reaction to his routine?
 * ... that in 2016, the removal of a few lines of code briefly "broke the Internet"?

8 June 2024

 * 00:00, 8 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Syrian artist Kefah Ali Deeb painted an empty chair (pictured) as her vision of victims and refugees?
 * ... that three of the four Richmond Theatres were destroyed by fire, of which the 1811 fire was described as "early America's first great disaster"?
 * ... that Claude Hamilton Verity, a grandson of Doncaster mayor Charles Verity, was an early pioneer of the synchronisation of sound with silent films?
 * ... that one of the "plushest" nightclubs in northern Florida turned into studios for a TV station in Jacksonville?
 * ... that Left Socialist-Revolutionary leader Maria Spiridonova addressed her party's fourth congress in October 1918 by letter as she was in jail?
 * ... that KT Leveston, the 254th pick in the 2024 NFL draft, is from U.S. area code 254?
 * ... that many people with heart failure, diabetes, or ME/CFS cannot raise their heart rates sufficiently during exercise?
 * ... that within years of Aza Arnold inventing a device to improve cotton roving, it was plagiarized across the United States and Europe?
 * ... that Aurora Gaming roster for Apex Legends is made up of Fire Beavers?

7 June 2024

 * 00:00, 7 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that exhibits at Peale's Philadelphia Museum included the first nearly complete skeleton of a mastodon (sketch pictured)?
 * ... that German factory worker Julius Welschof now plays in the National Football League?
 * ... that despite the success of their song "C U in da Ballpit", Camping in Alaska band members say they all hate it?
 * ... that journalist Jacques Poitras spent a month repeatedly crossing the "Imaginary Line" separating New Brunswick and Maine in order to publish a book about it?
 * ... that George Krugers was circumcised so he could pass as Muslim and film The Great Mecca Feast?
 * ... that the TikTok success of DellaXOZ "Ahh!!" prompted a lawyer to contact her?
 * ... that the New York State Pavilion, one of the most popular attractions at the 1964 World's Fair, later stored hazardous waste?
 * ... that Stellar Blade Eve was described as "a woman born from South Korea's culture and philosophy" by The Washington Post?
 * ... that Tad's Steaks offered "tasty food, low prices, service with a grunt"?

6 June 2024

 * 00:00, 6 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the Antimonumento 5J (pictured) was installed on 5 June 2023 to commemorate victims of police repression during the 2020 protests in response to the death of Giovanni López?
 * ... that Cypress College basketball coach Don Johnson, who was an All-American at UCLA, developed two players with minimal experience who later played for his alma mater and set records in the NBA?
 * ... that one of SZA's songs name-drops such figures as a boxer, a stand-up comedian, and Jesus?
 * ... that Shushu/Tong is a brand that creates fashion collections inspired by magical girl anime such as Puella Magi Madoka Magica?
 * ... that Peter Demetz, who taught German literature at Yale University from 1956 to 1991, was born in Prague where he was persecuted under the Nazis and escaped the Communist regime in 1949?
 * ... that Herschel the sea lion was defended by Greenpeace?
 * ... that Taiwanese long jumper Lin Yu-tang qualified for the 2024 Summer Olympics by switching out his broken track shoes between attempts?
 * ... that when Yuba County's library was built in 1906, it had a smoking room?
 * ... that a municipal purchase of 177 motorcycles by Hevearita Gunaryanti Rahayu, the mayor of Semarang, Indonesia, caused a social media controversy due to media misreporting?

5 June 2024

 * 00:00, 5 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Albert Tangora (pictured), one of the most successful competitive typewriter speed typists, once had his hands insured for US$100,000?
 * ... that the managing editor of Aujourd'hui was executed by firing squad in 1944?
 * ... that football player Michael Jurgens never lost in 42 high school varsity games?
 * ... that the success of the British band Shiva was cut short by the death of its lead vocalist?
 * ... that the 1972 Finnish film The Sheep Eaters gathered more than a million viewers opposite the 1975 Ice Hockey World Championships match between Finland and the Soviet Union?
 * ... that according to second-century AD Greek rhetorician Athenaeus, the Phoenicians played a flute-like instrument called the gingras in their mourning rituals?
 * ... that 55 Broad Street, a skyscraper in the Financial District of Manhattan, was called "an unlovable building in an unlivable neighborhood"?
 * ... that when Sithu Pauk Hla was appointed the governor of Yamethin, he was also given command of a 50-strong company of war elephants?

4 June 2024

 * 00:00, 4 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that scholars disagree on whether the earliest-known game boards (example pictured) date to the Neolithic or the Early Bronze Age?
 * ... that the Estado Novo deprived Aurora Rodrigues of sleep for more than two weeks to induce hallucinations?
 * ... that the Hogmanay special Live into 85 was so shambolic it ended a 32-year tradition?
 * ... that Casey Washington made the game-winning score that ended a record nine-overtime college football game?
 * ... that the distinctive coloration of the giant panda appears to serve as camouflage in both winter and summer?
 * ... that Saparinah Sadli defended one of her former students when Indonesia's State Intelligence Agency challenged her gendered exploration of the New Order regime?
 * ... that the 18th-century hymn "Alas! and Did My Saviour Bleed" has been criticised because its lyrics have singers call themselves a "worm"?
 * ... that Elizabeth Yeampierre has called Puerto Rico the "poster child for climate injustice" due to the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria?
 * ... that Boston's World's Museum was a theatre, an aquarium, a menagerie, and a freak show?

3 June 2024

 * 00:00, 3 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Lie Kiat Teng (pictured) appealed to the "moral obligation" of doctors to address a healthcare crisis in South Sulawesi?
 * ... that in 1978 the chairman of the Democratic Yemeni Union of Peasants was arrested after the South Yemeni government was taken over by Abdul Fattah Ismail?
 * ... that Lyle Bauer continued to attend Canadian Football League executive meetings despite being unable to speak due to his treatment for stage four throat cancer?
 * ... that the Capitolium of Constantinople, originally a pagan temple, was later topped by a cross?
 * ... that the diss track "6:16 in LA", directed at Drake, samples Al Green's "What a Wonderful Thing Love Is", a song that features Drake's guitarist uncle?
 * ... that an essay of jailed Socialist Revolutionary politician Alexander Helfgot was smuggled out of Russia and published in Berlin in 1922?
 * ... that when producer Daniel Grodnik proposed the idea for Terror Train to his wife, she thought that it sounded terrible?
 * ... that the Eurovision Song Contest 1991 was moved to Rome from Sanremo at a late stage due to increased security concerns resulting from the Gulf War?
 * ... that in college, American football player Jarrett Kingston started at the position of left guard, then moved to left tackle, and then played right tackle and right guard?

2 June 2024

 * 00:00, 2 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that the skulls of Yunxian Man (example pictured) are "relatively complete" despite being heavily crushed?
 * ... that Travis Clayton went from the eighth tier of English rugby union to being drafted into the National Football League, even though he had never played in an American football game?
 * ... that David Ben Avraham was granted Israeli residency after being killed by an IDF soldier?
 * ... that the mouse protagonist Mrs. Brisby from The Secret of NIMH had her name changed because of a trademark issue from a toy named "Frisbee"?
 * ... that Tachikawa Sumito made a hit cover in 1976 of a song that he first discovered when a housewife called into his radio show requesting to hear a version of it?
 * ... that Riley Testut developed AltStore because he wanted to publish his emulator Delta?
 * ... that the Obonga–Ottertooth Provincial Park is a significant habitat for woodland moose?
 * ... that Albert Wesker character design evokes the aesthetic of the Nazi ideal of the Übermensch, reflecting Resident Evil "core" theme of eugenics?
 * ... that after John Henry Newman wrote his Apologia Pro Vita Sua in response to an attack by Charles Kingsley, Kingsley compared Newman to a "treacherous ape" and implied that he was insane?

1 June 2024

 * 00:00, 1 June 2024 (UTC)


 * ... that Aishwarya Rai Bachchan (pictured) was the first Indian actress to be a juror at the Cannes Film Festival?
 * ... that Bruce Conner conceived of his short film Cosmic Ray as "presenting the eyes" for blind musician Ray Charles?
 * ... that Giovanni Manu was the first player from his university ever to be selected in the NFL draft?
 * ... that Barack Obama made an election promise to make non-emergency bills freely available online for a five-day public consultation period under "sunlight before signing"?
 * ... that Bob Noel was the one responsible for dealing "with all the dirty laundry" of the Green Bay Packers?
 * ... that New England Revolution manager Bruce Arena led the club to a record-breaking 73 points in the 2021 season?
 * ... that North West was originally going to be called Kaidence?
 * ... that Lock's Quest was said to feature "some of the best original music in a DS game"?
 * ... that 69 is "nice"?