Uncle John’s Legendary Lost Bathroom Reader

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by Bathroom Readers' Institute


  John: Ringo freelances.

  Reporter: There’s a “Stamp Out the Beatles” movement underway in Detroit. What are you going to do about it?

  Paul: We’re going to start a campaign to stamp out Detroit.

  Reporter: Who thought up the name, Beatles?

  Paul: I thought of it.

  Reporter: Why?

  Paul: Why not?

  Reporter: Beethoven figures in one of your songs. What do you think of Beethoven?

  Ringo: He’s great. Especially his poetry.

  Reporter: Ringo, why do you wear two rings on each hand?

  Ringo: Because I can’t fit them through my nose.

  Reporter: When you do a new song, how do you decide who sings the lead?

  John: We just get together and whoever knows most of the words sings the lead.

  Reporter: Do you think it’s wrong to set such a bad example to teenagers, smoking the way you do?

  Ringo: It’s better than being alcoholics.

  Reporter: What do you think of the criticism that you are not very good?

  George: We’re not.

  Reporter: What do you believe is the reason you are the most popular singing group today?

  John: We’ve no idea. If we did, we’d get four long-haired boys, put them together and become their managers.

  Reporter: You’ve admitted to being agnostics. Are you also irreverent?

  Paul: We are agnostics...so there’s no point in being irreverent.

  Some 4% of Americans are more likely to vote for a candidate who has an extramarital affair.

  WORDPLAY

  We use these words all the time, but most of us have no idea where they came from. Fortunately, we’re on the job, ready to supply their history and make your brief (?) stay in the john an educational one.

  POTLUCK. In the Middle Ages, cooks threw all their leftovers into a pot of water that was kept boiling most of the time. This makeshift stew was eaten by the family or fed to strangers when no other food was available. Since food was thrown in at random, its quality and taste depended entirely on luck.

  JUKEBOX. The term “juke” was originally a New Orleans slang expression meaning “to have sex.” Jukeboxes got their name because they were popular in houses of prostitution known as juke joints.

  SLUSH FUND. “Slush” was originally the name for kitchen grease from the galleys of naval sailing ships. Most of this sludge was used to lubricate masts of the ship; the rest was sold with other garbage whenever the ship entered port. Money made from the sale was kept in a “slush fund,” used to buy items for enlisted men.

  HAYWIRE. Bales of hay are held together with tightly strung wire. If the wire snaps, it whips around wildly and can injure people standing nearby.

  BROKE. Many banks in post-Renaissance Europe issued small, porcelain “borrower’s tiles” to their creditworthy customers. Like credit cards, these tiles were imprinted with the owner’s name, his credit limit, and the name of the bank. Each time the customer wanted to borrow money, he had to present the tile to the bank teller, who would compare the imprinted credit limit with how much the customer had already borrowed. If the borrower was past the limit, the teller “broke” the tile on the spot.

  BOMB. The term “bomb,” long in use as a name for explosive devices, was first used to describe a bad theater play by Grevile Corks, theater critic for the New York Standard in the 1920s. When one particularly bad play closed after only two performances, Corks wryly observed: “Since the producers were so eager to clear the theater, they might have tried a smoke bomb instead. It would have been quicker for the audience, and less painful.” The column was so popular that Corks started the “Bomb of the Year” award for the worst play on Broadway.

  Sherlock Holmes kept his tobacco in the toe of a Persian slipper.

  OUTSKIRTS. As medieval English towns grew too big to fit inside town walls, houses and other buildings were built outside them. These buildings surrounded the wall the same way a woman’s skirt surrounds her waist—and became known as the town’s “skirts.” People living on the outer fringes of even these buildings were considered to be living in the outskirts of the town.

  BANGS. In the early 19th century, it was common for English noblemen to maintain elaborate stables for their horses. But hard times in following years made stables an expensive luxury. Many nobles were forced to reduce their staffs—which meant that the remaining grooms had less time to spend on each horse. One innovation that resulted: instead of spending hours trimming each horse’s tail, grooms cut all tail hair the same length, a process they called “banging off.” Eventually the “banged” look became popular as a woman’s hairstyle, too.

  HUSBAND. Comes from the German words Hus and Bunda, which mean “house” and “owner.” The word originally had nothing to do with marital status, except for the fact that home ownership made husbands extremely desirable marriage partners.

  WIFE. Comes from the Anglo-Saxon words wifan and mann, which mean “weaver” and “human.” In ancient times there were no words that specifically described males or females; one way Anglo-Saxons denoted the difference was to use the word wifmann or “weaver-human,” since weaving was a task traditionally performed by women.

  PENKNIFE. One problem with quill pens was that their tips dulled quickly and needed constant sharpening. Knife makers of the 15th century produced special knives for that purpose; their sharp blades and compact size made them popular items.

  The heaviest bird in North America is the wild turkey.

  ON A CAROUSEL

  Just “sitting there watchin’ the wheels go ‘round and Wound?” While you’re there, you might as well learn a little bit about the origin of the carousel and other rides, as told by BRI member Jack Mingo.

  THE CAROUSEL

  The name carousel originated with a popular 12th-century Arabian horseman’s game called carosellos, or “little wars.” The rules were simple: teams rode in circles throwing perfume-filled clay balls from one rider to another. If a ball of perfume broke, the team lost. Their penalty: they carried the smell of defeat with them for days after.

  The game was brought to Europe by knights returning from the Crusades, and it evolved into elaborate, colorful tourneys called carousels.

  Making the Rounds. In the 17th century, the French developed a device to help young nobles train for carousels. It featured legless wooden horses attached to a center pole. As the center pole turned (powered by real horses, mules, or people), the nobles on their wooden steeds would try to spear hanging rings with their lances. (This later evolved into the “catching the brass ring” tradition.) The carousel device gradually evolved into a popular form of entertainment. The peasants rode on barrel-like horses; the nobles rode in elaborate chariots and boats.

  The Machine Age. Until the 1860s, carousels, which had become popular all over Europe, were still dependent on horses and mules for power. But that changed when Frederick Savage, an English engineer, designed a portable steam engine, which could turn as many as four rows of horses on a 48-foot-diameter wheel. Later, Savage also patented designs for the overhead camshafts and gears that moved the wooden horses up and down. This new type of carousel—called a “round-about” (later, merry-go-round)—was a huge success throughout Europe. Ads for carousels first appeared in America as early as 1800. Typically, offering fun was not enough—carousel owners also felt obliged to claim that doctors recommended the rides to improve blood circulation.

  Stargazer: Galileo believed in astrology.

  THE FERRIS WHEEL

  A 33-year-old American engineer named George Washington Ferris designed a giant “observation wheel” for Chicago’s World’s Columbian Exhibition in 1893, as an American counterpart to the Eiffel Tower (which had been unveiled four years earlier). At 250 feet in diameter, this first Ferris wheel could carry more than 2,000 passengers high above the city...and bring them smoothly back down. It was the hit of the fair; some 1.5 million people rode in it.

  It was such
a success, writes Tad Tuleja in Namesakes, that “it fostered many imitators at the turn of the century, the most notable being a 300-foot wheel constructed for the 1897 London Fair and a 197-foot one built for Vienna’s Prater Park in 1896....These giants proved impractical, of course, for the many carnival midways where Ferris’s invention now prospers; the average traveling wheel today is about 50 feet in diameter.”

  In 1904 Ferris’s original wheel, which cost $385,000 to build, was dismantled and sold for scrap. It brought in less than $2,000.

  ROLLER COASTERS

  The roller coaster was invented by an enterprising showman in Russia who built elaborate ice slides in St. Petersburg during the 15th century. Catherine the Great enjoyed the ice slides so much that she ordered tiny wheels added to the sleds so she could ride in the summer.

  • The first “modern” roller coaster was built in Coney Island in 1884, more than 400 years later.

  • Believe it or not, statistically, roller coasters are much safer than merry-go-rounds. One reason: People rarely decide to jump off a roller coaster while the ride is still moving. Also, the safety restraints work better. Despite that, 27 people died on roller coasters between 1973 and 1988.

  • Designers purposely create the illusion that your head is in danger of being chopped by a low overhang at the bottom of a hill. Actually there’s almost always a nine-foot clearance.

  • Americans take more than an estimated 214 million roller coaster rides each year.

  “We won’t make a sequel, but we may well make a second episode.”

  —Jon Peters, film producer

  Germans drink more beer per capita than any other nation on Earth.

  OXYMORONS

  Here’s a list of oxymorons sent to us by BRI member Peter McCracken. In case you don’t know, an oxymoron is a common phrase made of two words that appear to be contradictory.

  Military Intelligence

  Light Heavyweight

  Jumbo Shrimp

  Painless Dentistry

  Drag Race

  Friendly Fire

  Criminal Justice

  Permanent Temporary

  Amtrack Schedule

  Genuine Imitation

  Mandatory Option

  Protective Custody

  Limited Nuclear War

  Dear Occupant

  Standard Deviation

  Freezer Burn

  Pretty Ugly

  Industrial Park

  Loyal Opposition

  Eternal Life

  Natural Additives

  Student Teacher

  Educational Television

  Nonworking Mother

  Active Reserves

  Full-Price Discount

  Limited Immunity

  Death Benefits

  Upside Down

  Original Copy

  Random Order

  Irrational Logic

  Business Ethics

  Slightly Pregnant

  Holy Wars

  Half Dead

  Supreme Court

  Even Odds

  Baby Grand

  Inside Out

  Fresh Frozen

  Moral Majority

  Truth in Advertising

  Friendly Takeover

  Good Grief

  United Nations

  Baked Alaska

  Plastic Glasses

  Peacekeeping Missiles

  Somewhat Addictive

  Science Fiction

  Open Secret

  Unofficial Record

  Tax Return

  According to zoologists, deer like to play tag. They tag each other using their hooves.

  IT’S IN THE CARDS

  Do you like to play poker?...gin rummy?...bridge...or (in the bathroom) solitaire? Then maybe we can interest you in a couple of pages on the origin of playing cards.

  HISTORY

  Origin. The first playing cards are believed to have come from the Mamelukes, people of mixed Turkish and Mongolian blood who ruled Egypt from 1250 to 1517. Like today’s standard playing cards, the Mamelukes’ deck had 52 cards and four suits (swords, polo sticks, cups, and coins), with three face cards and 10 numbered cards per suit. Mameluke decks did not include queens or jacks; they used “Deputy Kings” and “Second,” or “Under-Deputy Kings,” instead.

  European Popularity. In the mid-1300s, the cards were introduced to Europe, where they spawned a gaming craze similar to the Monopoly or Trivial Pursuit fads of the 20th century. Historians measure their popularity not by how many times people wrote about them (cards received little or no mention) or by the number of decks that survive (few did), but by the number of cities that banned them. Paris was one of the first: it outlawed card-playing among “working men” in 1377. Other cities soon followed, and by the mid-1400s, anti-card sentiments reached a fervor. During one public demonstration in Nuremburg, led by the Catholic priest and future saint John Capistran (better known by his Spanish name, Juan Capistrano), more than 40,000 decks of cards, tens of thousands of dice, and 3,000 backgammon boards were burned in a public bonfire. None of the attempts to eliminate card-playing were successful; in fact, cards are one of only a few items of the 12th century that survive almost unchanged to this day.

  THAT SUITS ME FINE

  • The four modern suits—hearts, clubs, spades, and diamonds—originated in France around 1480, at a time when card makers were beginning to mass-produce decks for the first time.

  • The simple single-color designs were easier to paint using stencils and cheaper to produce than the more elaborate designs that had been popular in the past.

  Mighty Mouse’s girlfriend was named Pearl Pureheart.

  • Not all today’s cards use diamonds, hearts, spades, and clubs as suit symbols. Traditional German cards use hearts, leaves, acorns, and bells; Swiss cards use roses, shields, acorns, and bells; and Italian cards use swords, batons, cups, and coins.

  CARD FACTS

  • For more than 500 years, playing cards were much larger than today’s versions and didn’t have the indices (the numbers, letters, and suit marks on the top left corners) that let you read the cards in a tightly held hand. Card players either had to hold their cards in both hands to read them (which made them easy for other players to see), or else had to memorize them and then play with none of the cards showing. In the mid-19th century, card makers began adding the indices in decks called “squeezers” (which let you hold the cards closely together).

  • It was in “squeezer” decks that the jacks became a part of the deck. Earlier they had been called knaves, which, like kings, started with the letter “K”. To avoid the confusion of having two types of cards with the letter “K”, card makers changed knaves to jacks (a slang term for the knaves already) and used the letter “J” instead.

  • The first face cards were elaborately painted, full-length portraits. While beautiful, they posed a serious disadvantage: when they were dealt upside down, novice players tended to turn them right-side-up—telling experienced players how many face cards were in their hand. Card makers corrected this in the 19th century, when they began making decks with “double-ended” face cards.

  • The joker is the youngest—and the only American—card in the deck. It was added in the mid-19th century, when it was the highest-value card in an American game called Euchre. From there it gained popularity as a “wild” card in poker and other games.

  • In November 1742, an Englishman named Edmond Hoyle published a rule book on the popular game of Whist. The book was so successful that dozens of writers plagiarized it, even using the name “Hoyle’s” in the pirate editions. Today’s “Hoyle’s” rule books are descendants of the plagiarized versions, not the original.

  • The word “ace” is derived from the Latin word as, which means the “smallest unit of coinage.”

  Ruling class: Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt were seventh cousins once removed.

  THE SINGING CHIPMUNKS

  Alvin, Simon, and Theodore are t
he most famous chipmunks in the world. This min-biography was taken from Behind the Hits, by Bob Shannon and John Javna.

  THE WITCH DOCTOR

  In 1957, a 38-year-old songwriter named Ross Bagdasarian (stage name: David Seville) was sitting in his study when an idea for a new song came to him.

  “I looked up from my desk and saw a book called Duel with the Witch Doctor,” he recalled. “All the teenage records seemed to have one thing in common back then—you couldn’t understand any of the lyrics. So I decided to create a ‘Witch Doctor’ who would give advice to the lovelorn in his own language—a kind of qualified gibberish.”

  Bagdasarian quickly wrote and recorded the song...but was stumped about what kind of voice to use for the witch doctor (Whose advice consisted of: “Oo-ee, Oo-ah-ah, Ting-tang, Walla-walla Bing-bang.”)

  FINDING A VOICE

  One day Bagdasarian was fooling around with a tape recorder, playing with the speeds. He sang into the machine while it was running at half-speed...and then played it back at full-speed. The result: It sounded like he’d swallowed helium...or played a 45-rpm record at 78 rpm. It was exactly the voice he’d been looking for. (Note: Remember this was 1957; today’s sophisticated recording equipment hadn’t been invented yet.)

  Bagdasarian brought his finished tape to Liberty Records. “They flipped,” he said. Before 24 hours had elapsed, “The Witch Doctor” was on its way to record stores. Within weeks it was the #1 song in the nation. In all, it sold about 1.5 million copies.

  THE SINGING CHIPMUNKS

  A year later, Liberty Records found itself in financial trouble. So they asked Bagdasarian to come up with another song like “The Witch Doctor.” He agreed to try.

  According to astronaut Neil Armstrong, the moon’s surface is “fine and powdery.”

  He decided to turn the Witch Doctor’s voice into several different characters. As his son recalls: “He didn’t know whether to make them into hippos or elephants or beetles or what. He came up with the idea of chipmunks when he was driving in Yosemite National Park and this chipmunk almost dared him and his huge car to drive past. My dad was so taken with their audacious behavior that he decided to make these three singing characters chipmunks. He named them after three executives at Liberty Records. (Alvin: Al Bennett, the label president; Simon: Si Waronker, vice-chair; Theodore: Ted Keep, chief recording engineer.)

 

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