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Son of Thunderbeast posted:I thought it was that young wife fart joke. What's the dick joke? Yeah, I recalled it being a Mesopotamian fart joke that was found on a tablet or something. E: My error, it was Sumerian http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7536918.stm
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 06:44 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 21:58 |
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Ghost Leviathan posted:Romans, apparently. Yup. Silphium.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 06:49 |
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Proteus Jones posted:Yeah, I recalled it being a Mesopotamian fart joke that was found on a tablet or something. quote:The oldest British joke dates back to the 10th Century, and uses the traditional question and answer format to suggestively poke fun at Anglo-Saxon men.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 07:22 |
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Yeah, people that act like humanity is in some kind of moral free fall are stupid. We've always found stuff like dicks and farts funny. All the sexual shenanigans people get up to now people have always gotten up to. People are weird and gross and that's fine. We've always been weird and gross. We just are. We're dirty, hairy apes primarily ruled by our stomachs and are junk.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 08:07 |
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Somebody dig up that post about the nuclear submarine during the cold war tracing an eight-mile-long dick shape in the ocean. That's my favourite dick joke story.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 11:58 |
ToxicSlurpee posted:Yeah, people that act like humanity is in some kind of moral free fall are stupid. We've always found stuff like dicks and farts funny. All the sexual shenanigans people get up to now people have always gotten up to. People are weird and gross and that's fine. We've always been weird and gross. We just are. We're dirty, hairy apes primarily ruled by our stomachs and are junk. In ancient Rome it was perfectly normal to have murals of guys with giant dicks in your living room: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priapus
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 12:00 |
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Looks like we found the inspiration for Kate Beaton's pony.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 18:32 |
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Mister Speaker posted:Somebody dig up that post about the nuclear submarine during the cold war tracing an eight-mile-long dick shape in the ocean. Still happens, every few months somebody posts a screenshot from one of the sites that shows the tracks of flights in the TFR airpower or AI airplane threads of an airliner test flight or military training flight drawing a dick in the sky across half the US. In the military case, sometimes an SA goon was onboard, iirc.
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# ? Jul 7, 2018 22:59 |
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Ghost Leviathan posted:Why wouldn't they? I dont mean that literally. Im saying its a side of middle age culture that is rarely seen. Similar to when they found the graffiti at Pompeii. However, it is surprising to see those naughty doodles inside those manuscripts, since they were written by monks and owned by aristocrats. I guess even they arent above toilet humor.
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 00:57 |
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Chillbro Baggins posted:Still happens, every few months somebody posts a screenshot from one of the sites that shows the tracks of flights in the TFR airpower or AI airplane threads of an airliner test flight or military training flight drawing a dick in the sky across half the US. In the military case, sometimes an SA goon was onboard, iirc. Yeah didn't some USAF pilots get disciplined for it very recently? I can't really retell the submarine one properly, but I do remember the best part was the closing line, something like "That's the big secret: when you don't know where a Boomer is, it's somewhere in the Arctic Circle drawing an eight-mile-long dick.'
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 01:07 |
Mister Speaker posted:Yeah didn't some USAF pilots get disciplined for it very recently?
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 15:51 |
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ChocNitty posted:I dont mean that literally. Im saying its a side of middle age culture that is rarely seen. Similar to when they found the graffiti at Pompeii. However, it is surprising to see those naughty doodles inside those manuscripts, since they were written by monks and owned by aristocrats. I guess even they arent above toilet humor.
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 16:29 |
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Metal Geir Skogul posted:As a teenager my parents probably had to play the "find something he hasn't tried to stick his dick in" game when navigating through my bedroom. Couple that with a shorter life expectancy and no internet to waste time with and I'm surprised there isn't more lewd art from those days. Uh. What.
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 16:39 |
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Re slavery chat earlier, The Elephantine papyri are very interesting, containing the family archives of "a man called Ananiah, a Jewish temple official; his wife, Tamut, an Egyptian slave; and their children, over the course of forty-seven years" in the 5th century BC: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephantine_papyri#The_family_archive_of_Ananiah_and_Tamut
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 21:15 |
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Mister Speaker posted:
That would have been an interesting twist to The Hunt for Red October
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 21:29 |
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Cacafuego posted:That would have been an interesting twist to The Hunt for Red October What do you think doing a Crazy Ivan is?
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 22:15 |
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He always draws the right ball in the bottom half of the hour.
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# ? Jul 8, 2018 23:05 |
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Proteus Jones posted:Yeah, I recalled it being a Mesopotamian fart joke that was found on a tablet or something. Is that a sex joke, as well? The "husband's lap" part reminds me of Shakespeare's "country matters" sketch in Hamlet.
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# ? Jul 9, 2018 03:24 |
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https://archive.org/details/EDIS-SWDPC-01-04 Just a recording of a bugle call. In 1890. By a survivor of the Charge of the Light Brigade. And the bugle was used at Waterloo, obviously.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 15:51 |
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A kid who witnessed Lincoln's assassination lived long enough to appear on TV in the 50s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RPoymt3Jx4
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 17:28 |
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Proteus Jones posted:What do you think doing a Crazy Ivan is? It's a dynamite-throwing unit in Red Alert?
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 18:13 |
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duckmaster posted:https://archive.org/details/EDIS-SWDPC-01-04 Technology recording literal history is so freaking cool.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 18:17 |
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duckmaster posted:https://archive.org/details/EDIS-SWDPC-01-04 Wonderful! It's also interesting that the accents of the two people who speak sound perfectly modern to my ear, though the man at least must have grown up in the 1840's.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 18:37 |
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Isn't the modern British accent [family] farther departed from colonial accents than modern newscaster American English?
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 18:41 |
Metal Geir Skogul posted:Isn't the modern British accent [family] farther departed from colonial accents than modern newscaster American English? I think a Southern accent is also directly descended from colonial English.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 18:49 |
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chitoryu12 posted:I think a Southern accent is also directly descended from colonial English. It is. The Southern aristocracy very deliberately emulated the British aristocracy, including accents.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 19:23 |
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StrixNebulosa posted:Technology recording literal history is so freaking cool. I’ve always wondered what medieval music sounds like, and how close our approximation it is to the real thing.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 20:00 |
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This might be the earliest born person of whom a photo exists - there are a number of other contenders, most notably Conrad Heyer who was provably born in 1749 and a shoemaker called John Adams who claimed to have been born in 1745. In this case there is only very scant information at all about the photo; it is in possession of the New York Historical Society, whose archival catalogue states: "Ceasar [sic!], born a slave of Van R. [Rensselaer] Nicoll, son of William, in 1737 at Bethlehem, N.Y., where he died in 1852. The last slave to die in the North. This daguerreotype was taken in 1851. His 2nd master was Francis Nicoll, son of Van R. Nicoll and his 3rd master Wm. Nicoll Sill, grandson of Francis who left all to his wife Margaret Sill" The only independent sort-of-verification of this is an 1850 census entry for a "Cesar Nicholls", aged 110, in the household of Margaret Sill, but that's no definite proof that he really was this old. In any case, it's virtually certain that Caesar was the earliest born former slave to be photographed; if his biographical information is correct, he survived three generations of masters and (going off of the history of slave emancipation in New York) and probably only gained his legal freedom in 1827. When Caesar was (possibly) born in or around 1740, his masters were still subjects to the British crown, Japan enjoyed the world's highest literacy at about thirty percent and in the Holy Roman Empire, a certain Johann Sebastian Bach prepared to publish his Goldberg Variations
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 21:05 |
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bony tony posted:It's a dynamite-throwing unit in Red Alert? It places the dynamite! PLACES.
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 21:49 |
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There's a recording of Otto Von Bismarck too, you can go listen to the Iron Chancellor's voice on his Wikipedia page. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1889_recording_by_Otto_von_Bismarck.ogg
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# ? Jul 11, 2018 22:00 |
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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vzLduvnW-FA Pope Leo XVIII, almost certainly the earliest born person to be filmed. In 1810 the French were being pushed out of Portugal in the Penninsular War and the US annexed the Republic of West Florida. Mind blowing.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 00:22 |
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duckmaster posted:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vzLduvnW-FA Widely considered to be a bad move by the US
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 00:40 |
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chitoryu12 posted:I think a Southern accent is also directly descended from colonial English. High southern, yes. Much like Upper RP, it's dying out pretty fast. Granted I'm in a more rural area, but I don't know of anyone under 75 who has that accent. I'd imagine Georgia's coast - Savannah, St. Simons - where there's old money who continue to send their children to New England boarding schools and practice noblesse oblige might trend slightly younger with the accent. The rest of us have speech patterns more closely aligned to the language of Honey Boo Boo.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 02:37 |
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Cythereal posted:It is. The Southern aristocracy very deliberately emulated the British aristocracy, including accents. Funny how the plummy British upper class accent probably came from them having hosed up jaws from inbreeding.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 04:07 |
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I remember reading about how an actor studied how medieval English people likely sounded a lot more like Southerners, so he ended up playing a Macbeth that sounded like Gomer Pyle.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 04:10 |
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Ghost Leviathan posted:I remember reading about how an actor studied how medieval English people likely sounded a lot more like Southerners, so he ended up playing a Macbeth that sounded like Gomer Pyle. Which reminds me of that episode of Gomer Pyle where he sings the song Impossible Dream from Man of La Mancha which led to me finding out that Jim Nabors had an absolutely stunning singing voice
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 04:19 |
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We actually don't know the identity of the first person to ever be photographed. In 1838 Louis Daguerre was working on the process that later swept the world by storm, the Daguerreotype. He had set his equipment up and pointed it out his window, at Boulevard du Temple, in Paris, France. The exposure lasted about 7 miniutes. The thing is, with these early long exposures, the only things that were captured clearly were things that kept still during the entire process. That's why we see those stands that many claim were used for Momento Mori photos, to prop of the deceased for 'one last family photo'. Those stands were actually used to help the subjects hold long, 10+ miniute exposures without moving around too much. So, then, the first person ever photographed. There was a shoe shiner on the corner, and at some point during Dagurre's exposure, some gentleman stopped to have his shoes cleaned. As he stood there, he was fairly still.... And thus, we have him (and a few other figures, if you look closely) preserved as the first human to be photographed. That Damn Satyr has a new favorite as of 16:53 on Jul 12, 2018 |
# ? Jul 12, 2018 05:42 |
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So you want to make an electric telegraph. The year is 1809. The electric light bulb hasn’t been invented. The electric motor hasn’t been invented. In fact, no one is yet aware of the relationship between electricity and magnetism. So how can you turn a signal on the wire into something perceivable on the other end? quote:At the receiving end each wire is connected to one of a series of thirty-five electrodes that are immersed in an acid bath. Completion the circuit caused the evolution of bubbles of hydrogen at the electrode corresponds to a particular letter or a number. http://people.seas.harvard.edu/~jones/cscie129/images/history/von_Soem.html
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 06:24 |
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That drat Satyr posted:We actually don't know the identity of the first person to ever be photographed. If you've ever wondered why everyone seems to look so stern in old photographs, this is the reason - nobody could hold a smile for the long exposure time.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 06:36 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 21:58 |
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Say Nothing posted:If you've ever wondered why everyone seems to look so stern in old photographs, this is the reason - nobody could hold a smile for the long exposure time. If you ever want an easy dig at a figure from before circa 1900, just say “there is no known photograph of <person> smiling”. It’s usually true.
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# ? Jul 12, 2018 06:38 |