The Top 50 Amazing-but-True Holiday Facts

Category: Joke Board

Post 1 by Blue Velvet (I've got the platinum golden silver bronze poster award.) on Tuesday, 05-Dec-2006 21:10:12

The Top 50 Amazing-but-True Holiday Facts

* In the village where the original Saint Nicholas was born,

children celebrate Christmas by giving gifts to old men

with long white beards.

* Children whose families celebrate both Hanukkah and Christmas

have a 97 percent higher chance of getting socks as a gift.

* The yule log was originally a symbol of good digestion

following an overlarge Christmas feast.

* The Japanese term for Christmas, Kurisumasu Omedeto, can also

be loosely translated as "Morning of the Greedy Children."

* On December 23, 1775, as Ben Franklin staggered out of the

Continental Congress Christmas Party on the arm of colonial

party girl Patience Rutledge, a furious Mrs. Franklin hurled

a fruitcake at him, striking the Liberty Bell instead.

* The sugar rush of a fruitcake is canceled out by its alcohol

content.

* For the past decade, the Spanish-speaking Santa at the

Del Amo mall in Torrance, CA, has been played by Erik Estrada.

* Resurrected by Budweiser in the 20th century, the phrase

"Wassup!" comes from a Christmas drinking game from the Middle

Ages in which players chugged hot wassail. The first to vomit

-- or "wass-up" -- would then be drowned in a nearby lake.

* Next year, Mars, Inc. will debut special M&M versions for

Purim and Yom Kippur.

* The dogs barking "Jingle Bells" on the novelty record were

not dogs at all, but parrots, which can mimic dogs and are

easier to train.

* Jesus was actually born on January 1, but Joseph and Mary

moved the date back a week to get a government-approved

tax deduction.

* As part of top-secret "Operation Bagdhad Bells," the Bush

administration actually considered sending Salvation Army

troops into Iraq.

* The first-ever Hanukkah latke recipe featured turnips,

rhubarb and kale. These proved so unpopular that many

different vegetables were substituted until the current

potato version prevailed.

* In certain parts of the world, eggnog is used as a sexual

lubricant.

* In Latvia, indoor Christmas trees were originally fake.

Real trees started being used in 1923 when the factory

making the fake ones burned down.

* During the early 1970s, the Hasbro company attempted to

build a "North Pole" toy factory at Point Barrow, Alaska.

Construction was halted when feasibility studies predicted

labor shortages.

* In freshly-fallen snow, reindeer hoof prints are indistinguishable

from those of the common Missouri white-tailed deer.

* In some parts of Scandinavia where evergreens are legally

protected, people still follow a tradition of making Christmas

trees from potted poison ivy plants tended indoors. The locals

say that along with gifts, Kris Kringle brings immunity to the

skin irritants the plant produces.

* Most serious drummers consider "pa-rum-pum-pum-pum" a

distastefully pedestrian riff.

* "It's a Wonderful Life" was original a detective story written

for star Humphrey Bogart -- and in the story, whenever a

bell rang an angel got cement shoes.

* The literal translation of "Chanukah" from ancient Hebrew into

English means, "Buy seven, get the eighth one free."

* After the Three Wise Men left, Joseph bartered the gold and

frankincense for more practical gifts: a camel-ready infant

seat and three hours of babysitting. He kept the myrrh because

of its well-known ability to heal swaddling rash.

* Studies show that neighbors tend to complain about wattage-

sucking, multimedia outdoor decorations because they are

*jealous*.

* On the eighth day of Christmas, Jesus was circumcised.

* The oil in the Temple menorah lasted twice as long as now

thought, but the information was suppressed by parents who

couldn't afford 16 nights of Chanukah presents.

* The most popular eggnog in Russia is not made from chicken

eggs, but from caviar.

* Every year between Christmas Day and New Year's day, there is

a 2-for-1 sale on caribou patties at the Anchorage Deli.

* The tradition of kissing under the mistletoe originated in

Germany in the 18th century when a person who was deathly

allergic to mistletoe came in contact it and had to be revived

by mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.

* Balthasar, the third King of Orient, was gay.

* Absurd as it seems, behavioral scientists claim kids don't want

expensive toys -- what they REALLY want is just to be loved.

* Beginning in 2001, the White House Christmas tree decorations

have included a novelty ornament given to President Bush by

Vice President Cheney: A silver-plated election ballot with

a hanging chad.

* Holiday fruitcake began as a prank made from carefully

reshaped reindeer droppings.

* The Egyptians celebrated a holiday they called "Chrystmus"

over 1700 years before the birth of Christ.

* The primary causes of death during the holidays are heart

attacks and suicide caused by the arrival of credit-card bills.

* According to the Department of Homeland Security's 2007

strategic plan, 2006 will be the last year youngsters can

sit on a mall Santa's lap without first passing through a

metal detector.

* Properly prepared, figgy pudding is a potent aphrodisiac.

* The average height of a Christmas tree (5' 4") is exactly

the same as the distance between Jesus's hands on the cross.

* For years, the U.S. Postal Service has secretly answered

letters addressed to Santa Claus. Due to outsourcing of the

Holiday Mail division to Mumbai, such letters are now more

likely to get positive responses if they are written in Punjabi.

* Studies show that while toddlers love Christmas tree lights,

they prefer Christmas tree *fires*.

* "Black Friday" originated as a ritual of purchasing highly

prized whimsical curios for unconverted village urchins

and then burning them together at the stake.

* Tinsel is an excellent garnish for chicken or veal.

* Red and green became official Christmas colors in 1939, when

it was recognized that red marked-down price tags brought

in green cash during the shopping season.

* "Extreme-Ultra-Orthodox" Jews have only six non-holidays a year.

* "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" was banned from the airwaves

and bookstores from 1950-1956 because of its implied support

for Communism.

* Pope Gregory moved Christmas from its original day, March 17,

at the request of Irish bishops and barley farmers who were

promoting a new holiday to commemorate Saint Patrick.

* Eggnog was created after its predecessors beefnog, hamnog and

troutnog failed miserably.

* The reason you almost never see purple Christmas lights is

that Saint Nicholas, the prototype for Santa Clause, believed

purple was satanic. He even threatened to have any of his

parishioners who wore purple excommunicated.

* Reindeer feces have been known to burn holes in roof shingles.

* For nine years following the 1843 publication of "A Christmas

Carol," Ebenezer was the most popular boys' name in Great

Britain.

* If you pour sourmash whiskey on a pine wreath purchased at

Wal-Mart anytime between 1998 and 2002 and set it aflame,

it gives off the scent of warm apple cider.

Post 2 by blbobby (Ooo you're gona like this!) on Wednesday, 06-Dec-2006 1:04:56

Well, that's interesting. I guess my favorite is:
* According to the Department of Homeland Security's 2007

strategic plan, 2006 will be the last year youngsters can

sit on a mall Santa's lap without first passing through a

metal detector.

That's kind of sad.

Bob

Post 3 by Blue Velvet (I've got the platinum golden silver bronze poster award.) on Wednesday, 06-Dec-2006 12:31:35

Some of these sound like they could possibly be true, while others are clearly jokes. But I think they're all supposed to be put ons.