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What is the Longest Film Ever Made? | Longest Movies | Life's Little Mysteries. You know the feeling. You thought the movie was going to be good, but it's bad really bad, teeth-gnashingly, soul-deadeningly bad. Bad films seem endless, as each second of cinematic awfulness seems to last centuries. There are many films that seem really long, but which is the longest in real time? The answer depends on exactly what you mean by film. To most people, a film is a movie they see in a theater, usually starring one or more famous actors and lasting around an hour and a half. Such films were never intended for a theatrical release but instead created for the artists' own pleasure or were meant to be staged in an art gallery where viewers are not expected to watch the entire film. The longest film on record is an experimental documentary by Gerard Courant titled "Cinématon," which clocks in at a butt-numbing 152 hours, and takes nearly a week to watch in its entirety.

Got a question? Bogus English Ghost Video Goes Viral | Viral English Ghost Video a Fake | Paranormal Activity | Life's Little Mysteries. It's been a big month for weird videos. Last week, a super-blurry video of an alleged Bigfoot in North Carolina was released. Now a family in Coventry, England has released video footage of what they claim is poltergeist activity inside their house.

But it's doubtful that the so-called "poltergeist" is real. Lisa Manning told reporters that she and her two children first noticed odd things happening around the house a few weeks ago, such as "chairs flying across the room and crashing into walls," and cupboard doors that "banged open and shut before being ripped off their hinges.

" The video, which runs just under a minute, appears to show a bedroom closet door opening on its own. About 10 seconds later, a small pink chair slides backward toward the closet and a pile of stuff on the floor. The video is being touted by some as evidence of the paranormal and has gone viral, leaving hundreds of thousands of people around the world wondering what it is. Who's the Greatest Quarterback Ever? | Life's Little Mysteries. Trying to name the best quarterback in NFL history can lead to arguments without end. If you walk into a sports bar and ask five fans who is the greatest signal-caller ever, you're likely to get five different answers. If you're in Indianapolis, chances are Peyton Manning will get the nod. But Denver fans would argue John Elway is the best, just as Miami supporters would do the same for Dan Marino.

It all depends on the criteria used to determine the best. If raw statistics are the main factor, then Brett Favre may be named. But if winning the Super Bowl was the ultimate measuring stick, then Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw, both with four Super Bowl victories, would be your picks as the top QBs, with Tom Brady and Troy Aikman (each with 3 Super Bowl wins) close behind. Then again, it's important to not overlook the early greats of the game. The best in his era If a quarterback's primary purpose is to help his team win, then Graham has no peer, King wrote. The best based on statistics. Who’s Better, Kobe Bryant or LeBron James?

Now that LeBron James is again at home watching watching the rest of the NBA playoffs, the much hoped-for NBA Finals match-up of LeBron James versus Kobe Bryant will have to wait at least one more year. Yet, among fans, the debate over which of these two stars can claim the title of the game's current greatest player never ends. Kobe fans immediately point to his championship jewelry and Lebron's ring-less hand.

But Lebron lovers remind them who the league MVP is, for the second year in a row. Opinions won't get us anywhere in the argument, so let's look at some raw numbers. Because Kobe is about six years older and has played seven more NBA seasons, comparing career averages can be a little misleading. So, let's look at this from two vantage points. So, based on these statistics, James has the better numbers overall. Dan Peterson writes about sports science at Sports Are 80 Percent Mental. Who's the Greatest Baseball Player Ever? | Best Baseball Players in History | Life's Little Mysteries.

No sport is more dependent on its statistics than baseball. For decades, fans have used those numbers to decide for themselves who the greatest baseball player of all time is. It's a tough question, no doubt, as divisive and subjective trying to name the greatest NFL quarterback. But using baseball's statistics, in tandem with other barometers, the answer to the question becomes rather clear to some experts. It's why the long-running sports publication The Sporting News in its comprehensive baseball book "Baseball's 100 Greatest Players" (Sporting News Publishing Co., 1998) places George Herman "Babe" Ruth atop its list as the greatest baseball player to ever play the game. The Society for American Baseball Research also names Ruth the sport's greatest player.

Why Babe was the best Ruth impacted his sport like no other athlete ever has, and may ever will. His career home run record lasted nearly 40 years, until another legend, Hank Aaron, surpassed it. Other baseball greats Got a question? When Did Bowling Start? | Life's Little Mysteries. An Egyptian child's tomb, dating to 3,200 B.C., contained bowling balls and pins. Various forms of bowling have been popular in America since colonial times, as the English, Dutch, and German settlers all imported their own variations of bowling. By the 1870s, competitive bowling between clubs was common in New York, Chicago and Milwaukee. Tenpin bowling dominated the sport, but without official rules and equipment standards the game flourished only at the local level. On Sept. 9, 1895, the American Bowling Congress (ABC) was organized in New York City. The ABC held its first national tournament in 1901.

A hard rubber ball was introduced in 1905. The United States Bowling Congress was founded in 2005 with the merger of the American Bowling Congress, Women's International Bowling Congress, Young American Bowling Alliance, and USA Bowling. By the 1970s, annual prizes money in U.S. tournaments grew to $1 million. Why Eat Shark Fin Soup? | Health, Nutrition, and Taste of Shark Fins | Shark Fin Soup Ban | Life's Little Mysteries. On Monday (May 30), the California Assembly overwhelmingly approved a bill that would ban the possession and sale of shark fins the key ingredient of shark fin soup, an ancient and prized Chinese dish. The law is intended to curtail the shark finning industry, which entails the brutal hacking off of the dorsal and pectoral fins of millions of live sharks each year. Opponents of the bill have just days to argue in favor of shark fins before the state Senate votes on the issue in June. Is there really something to be gained from eating shark fins, as they say there is, that outweighs the gross environmental harm caused by obtaining them?

Not really. For centuries in China, shark fins were believed to contain the essence of virility, wealth and power. Apparently, though, those qualities are tasteless: Even their biggest fans admit that the fins themselves don't have much flavor. In fact, shark fins can be extremely unhealthy. Trifolium repens. Trifolium repens, the white clover (also known as Dutch clover), is a species of clover native to Europe, North Africa, and West Asia. It has been widely introduced worldwide as a pasture crop, and is now also common in most grassy areas of North America and New Zealand. Name[edit] The genus name, Trifolium, derives from the Latin tres, "three", and folium, "leaf", so called from the characteristic form of the leaf, which has three leaflets (trifoliate); hence the popular name "trefoil". The species name, repens, is Latin for "creeping". Growth[edit] Cultivation and uses[edit] Companion planting[edit] White clover grows among turfgrass, crops, and in a large number of other landscapes.[1] It is also found in a limited range of different field type environments.

Culinary uses[edit] Besides making an excellent forage crop for livestock, clovers are a valuable survival food: they are high in proteins, widespread, and abundant. Four leaf Trifolium repens, in its natural setting. References[edit] White clover. In depth news stories lance armstrong. Lance Armstrong News. Why Clemens and Armstrong Aren’t Worth Pursuing Anymore. FBI wants Lance Armstrong tapes. Posted Wed 15 Jun 2011, 10:40am AEST The FBI has contacted a Colorado restaurant to get surveillance tapes of a conversation between seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong and former team-mate Tyler Hamilton over the weekend.

Hamilton last month accused Armstrong of repeatedly doping and encouraging his team-mates to use performance-enhancing drugs. The pair ran into each other at the Cache Cache restaurant in Aspen on Saturday night. Jodi Larner, a co-owner of the restaurant, told the New York Times that she spoke to an FBI agent and was told she would be subpoenaed for the surveillance tape. It is not clear if the restaurant's video will actually show the confrontation between Hamilton and Armstrong, which Hamilton's attorney reported to federal authorities. The New York Times, citing "a person briefed on the matter," said authorities are probing whether the encounter constitutes witness tampering on Armstrong's part. Armstrong has demanded an apology from CBS over the report. Lou Gehrig's Disease | Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis | ALS | Life's Little Mysteries.

Lou Gehrig may not have died from Lou Gehrig's disease. That is a scenario made possible by new research that provides more clues to the possible link between head trauma, like sports concussions, and his namesake disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. The findings also provide direct evidence that repeated blows to the head are a cause of motor neuron diseases, where patients lose control over voluntary muscle movements. Scientists at Boston University's Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) studied the brains and spinal cords of twelve deceased former athletes who had suffered multiple concussions during their playing days. They and their families had donated their remains to CSTE's Brain Bank to be used for research, funded by the National Football League.

Dr. This discovery led her to the conclusion that these three athletes died of a disease similar to but somewhat different than ALS. Got a question? What's the Biggest Dam in the World? | Where Is the World's Largest Dam? | Life's Little Mysteries. At 50 stories high and with a span of more than a mile, one of the world's largest feats of modern engineering is not a skyscraper. It's a hydroelectric dam. The Three Gorges Dam in Hubei Province, China, can hold back more than five trillion gallons (19 billion cubic meters) of water, according to NASA. At 1.4 miles wide (2.3 kilometers) and 630 feet (192 meters) high, Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydroelectric dam in the world, according to International Water Power & Dam Construction magazine. Three Gorges impounds the Yangtze River about 1,000 miles (1,610 km) west of Shanghai. Until the Three Gorges Dam's near-completion in 2009, the Guri dam in Venezuela held the title of the world's largest, followed by the Itaipu dam on the border between Brazil and Paraguay, according to International Water Power & Dam Construction magazine.

But the Three Gorges Dam garnered nearly as much media attention for its sheer size as it for the controversy surrounding the project. Got a question? How Do Post Office Machines Read Addresses? | Life's Little Mysteries. Neither snow nor rain nor scribbled zip code stays these couriers and their computer counterparts from the swift completion of their appointed rounds. The United States Postal Service (USPS) began researching remote computer readers (RCRs) for handwritten addresses in 1983. At the time, the technology required to scan and understand a human scrawl simply did not exist.

Not until Christmas of 1997 did the USPS and the University of Buffalo's Center for Excellence in Document Analysis and Recognition (CEDAR) deploy its first handwritten address-reading prototype, which rejected 85 percent of envelopes and correctly identified the address in only 10 percent of those it read with a 2 percent error rate. Humans read and comprehend with an ease that belies the immense difficulty of computer pattern recognition (including patterns such as numbers and letters). It is one of the central problems in artificial intelligence. So even the prototype's 2 percent was viewed as a great success.

Lady Gaga impersonators Break World Record | Life's Little Mysteries. Mafia Murder Technique Put to the Acid Test | How Long Do Mafia Victims Take to Dissolve In Sulfuric Acid? | Life's Little Mysteries. The Sicilian Mafia is known for its "lupara bianca," or "white shotgun," murders, whereby victims mysteriously vanish without a trace. According to informants, a common method of disposal is to dissolve the bodies of victims in vats of sulfuric acid. Not only does this satisfy any Mafioso's sadistic side , it also destroys the evidencei.e. the corpsewithin minutes. Or so it is said. "We put the people in acid. Recently, a group of forensic scientists decided to engage in a gruesome act of myth-busting, and tested whether or not flesh really does disintegrate within minutes when dunked in acid. When the researchers placed pieces of pig carcasses in sulfuric acid, the flesh took several days to dissolve.

"But it is impossible that they completely destroyed a corpse with acid," Grillo told Science News. Perhaps there are worse acts than a bit of exaggeration. Got a question? Gym Class Interrupted by Worms Falling From Sky | Raining Worms & Worm Showers | Life's Little Mysteries. A group of second-graders had an unpleasant surprise last month when worms began falling from the sky during their gym class. On March 4, the students were in the middle of a soccer match on an Astroturf field at Galashiels Academy in the United Kingdom when they began to be pelted with dozens of earthworms from the sky. It was approximately 9:15 a.m. and there wasn't a cloud to be seen.

"They just kept coming down," David Crichton, a 26-year-old teacher at the school, told news.stv.tv. "The kids were laughing but some were covering their heads and others were running for cover for a while. They just scattered to get out of the way. " Crichton scooped up handfuls of the worms as proof they had landed on his class, and later found more worms spread across a tennis court almost 300 feet away. "I spoke with the science department here but none of them had any explanation for it," Crichton said. What's Sexsomnia? | Life's Little Mysteries. Simply put, sexsomnia is the act of having sex while asleep.

But for sleep researchers and legal scholars, it's an emerging sleep disorder with far-reaching implications. Sexsomnia, or sleep sex, started popping up in scientific case studies in the late 1990s. Behaviors range from groaning to masturbation to full-on sexual intercourse with a bed partner. In one reported case, the recipient of these sexual attentions didn't know her partner was asleep until he started snoring mid-coitus.

Most people with sexsomnia don't remember their sexual antics the next morning, and they often are too embarrassed to tell their doctor about the problem. Most controversially, at least five men worldwide have been acquitted of sexual assault by arguing that they had sexsomnia and thus weren't conscious for the crime, triggering debate among lawyers and the public as to whether sleep sex is a valid criminal defense. Will Sunscreen Protect You from Solar Flares? | Should You Wear Sunscreen During Solar Flares? | Life's Little Mysteries. What Does the Yeti Look Like? | Russia to Fund Yeti Research | Bigfoot & Mythical Beasts | Life's Little Mysteries. Why Do Babies' Eyes Start Out Blue, Then Change Color? | Why Are Babies Often Born with Blue Eyes? | Melanin & Pigment | Life's Little Mysteries.

Television Producing Process: Pilot Show to Television Series | Entertainment & Producing Prime Time TV | Life's Little Mysteries. BEST OPTICAL ILLUSIONS IN THE WORLD 2. BEST OPTICAL ILLUSIONS IN THE WORLD! Does the Human Body Replace All Its Cells Every 7 Years? | Cell Division & Reproduction | Life's Little Mysteries.

Why are Planets Round? | Life's Little Mysteries.