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Tag: October

  • October 5 in Pop Culture HIstory

    October 5 in Pop Culture HIstory

    October 5th History, Trivia, and Fun Facts

    October 5th History Highlights

    • 1877 – Chiff Joseph surrendered to US Cavalry Forces. He famously stated: “From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”
    • 2001 – Barry Bonds hit Home Runs #71 & 72, beating Mark McGuire’s prior record. He went on the hit 73 for the season and is still the current record.
    • If you were born on October 5th,
      You were likely conceived the week of… January 12th (same year)

    World Teachers Day

    October 5, 1994, was the first celebration of World Teachers Day. This day is set aside to commemorate and celebrate teachers in the local community. The day has been recognized by The United Nations. Communities are encouraged to sponsor and plan events around the day. Many countries including the United States celebrate this day.

    October 5th is…

    Apple Betty Day
    Chic Spy Day
    Do Something Nice Day
    Get Funky Day
    World Teachers Day

    October 5th Birthday Quotes

    “Knowing how to think empowers you far beyond those who know only what to think.”
    – Neil deGrasse Tyson

    “If it were not for the reporters, I would tell you the truth.”
    – Chester A. Arthur

    “It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of tomorrow.”
    – Robert H. Goddard

    “Since I came here I have learned that Chester A. Arthur is one man and the President of the United States is another.”
    – Chester A. Arthur

    “It strikes me as being morally repulsive and intellectually absurd that people die of want in a world of surplus.”
    – Bob Geldof

    “All I ever wanted to do is darken the day and brighten the night.”
    – Clive Barker

    “Yesterday’s the past, tomorrow’s the future, but today is a gift. That’s why it’s called the present.”
    – Bil Keane

    October 5th Birthdays

    1829 – Chester A. Arthur, American politician, 21st President of the United States (died in 1886)
    1864 – Louis Lumiere, movie pioneer, and inventor (died in 1948)
    1882 – Robert H. Goddard, American physicist and engineer (died in 1945)
    1902 – Larry Fine, American comedian, Founding Stooge (died in 1975)
    1919 – Donald Pleasence, English actor (died in 1995)
    1922 – Bil Keane, American cartoonist, Family Circus (died in 2011)
    1923 – Glynis Johns, South African-born British actress
    1943 – Steve Miller, American singer-songwriter
    1950 – Jeff Conaway, American actor (died in 2011)
    1951 – Karen Allen, American actress
    1951 – Bob Geldof, British singer-songwriter
    1952 – Clive Barker, English author, director, producer, and screenwriter
    1952 – Harold Faltermeyer, German keyboard player
    1958 – Neil deGrasse Tyson, American astrophysicist, cosmologist, and author

    October 5th History

    1944 – Suffrage was extended to women in France.

    1947 – The first televised White House address was given by US President Harry S. Truman.

    1950 – You Bet Your Life, featuring Groucho Marx, premiered on NBC.

    1957 – #1 Hit October 5, 1957 – October 18, 1957: Jimmie Rodgers – Honeycomb

    1959 – #1 Hit October 5, 1959 – November 15, 1959: Bobby Darin – Mack the Knife

    1962 – Dr. No, the first in the James Bond film series, was released.

    1966 There was a partial core meltdown at the Enrico Fermi demonstration nuclear breeder reactor, near Detroit, Michigan.

    1969 – The first episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus aired on BBC One. It ran 45 episodes, until 1974.

    1970 – The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) began broadcasting and National Educational Television (NET) closed.

    1974 – #1 Hit October 5, 1974 – October 18, 1974: Olivia Newton-John – I Honestly Love You

    1982 – Johnson & Johnson began a nationwide product recall in the US for all products in its Tylenol brand after several bottles in Chicago were found to have been laced with cyanide, resulting in seven deaths.

    1984 – Marc Garneau became the first Canadian in space, flying aboard the US Space Shuttle Challenger.

    1991 – #1 Hit October 5, 1991 – October 11, 1991: Marky Mark & the Funky Bunch featuring Loleatta Holloway – Good Vibrations

    1991 – The first official version of the Linux kernel (version 0.02) was released.

    2001 – Barry Bonds surpassed Mark McGwire’s single-season home run total with the 71st and 72nd home runs.

    2002 – #1 Hit October 5, 2002 – November 8, 2002: Kelly Clarkson – A Moment Like This

    2011 – American Horror Story premiered on FX

    Today’s Random Trivia and Shower Thoughts

    Harvard’s endowment fund is beggir than Russia’s entire federal education budget.

    A group of Telephones is a Ring.

    I have a 4.0 GPA and I still can’t determine my rights and lefts until I make a weird gesture with my hands.

    “I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too!” -The Wizard of Oz (1939) #moviequotes

    Congratulate a single female performer with “Brava!”

    We use escalators, get fat, and then use Stairmasters.

    “bring your nickels, tap your feet” #misunderstoodlyrics

    SWIMS upside down is also SWIMS

    H is probably the hardest letter to spell the sound of.

    Female lions do most of the hunting for the Pride.

    “Sometimes when you’re doin’ simple things around the house, maybe you’ll think of me and smile.” #songlyrics

    More Pop Culture History Resources

  • October 4 in Pop Culture History

    October 4 in Pop Culture History

    October 4th History, Trivia, and Fun Facts

    October 4th History Highlights

    • 1582 – Pope Gregory XIII adjusted the calendar, making The day after Thursday, October 4, 1582, as now Friday, October 15, 1582, starting the Gregorian Calendar which we use today.
    • 1943 – Corsica (a French Territory) was liberated from Nazi Germany.
    • 1957 – The USSR launched Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth.
    • If you were born on October 4th,
      You were likely conceived the week of… January 11th (same year)

    Traditional October 4th Information

    October 4 was established in 1952 as a day of charity. Professional Golfers go out and play with amateurs in order to gain funds for different causes. The professionals play and the amateurs pay, so to speak, for the privilege. This day is always on October 4 but can be found also on differing days in June.

    October 4th is…

    Feast of St. Francis of Assisi
    Improve Your Office Day
    Ships-In-Bottles Day
    Taco Day
    10-4 Day
    Vodka Day
    World Animal Day

    October 4th Birthday Quotes

    “In my experience, there’s only one thing that will always steer you toward success: That’s to have a vision and to stick with it… Once I have a vision for a new venture, I’m going to ride that vision until the wheels come off.”
    – Russell Simmons

    “A comedian does funny things. A good comedian does things funny.”
    – Buster Keaton

    “Every expert was once a beginner.”
    Rutherford B. Hayes

    “I think writer’s block is simply the dread that you are going to write something horrible. But as a writer, I believe that if you sit down at the keys long enough, sooner or later something will come out.”
    Roy Blount, Jr.

    “I don’t have any problem doing anything. The secret is I have no shame.”
    – Dakota Johnson

    “No matter how rudely someone treats you, remain kind. Walking away at peace with yourself is worth it.”
    – Anne Rice

    October 4th Birthdays

    1822 – Rutherford B. Hayes, American general, lawyer, and politician, 19th President of the United States (died in 1893)
    1892 – Robert Lawson, American author, and illustrator (died in 1957)
    1895 – Buster Keaton, American film actor, director, and producer (died in 1966)
    1896 – Dorothy Lawrence, English reporter, secretly posed as a man to serve during World War I (died in 1964)
    1923 – Charlton Heston, American actor, civil and gun rights activist (died in 2008)
    1937 – Jackie Collins, English-American author (died in 2015)
    1941 – Roy Blount, Jr., American humorist and journalist
    1941 – Anne Rice, American author
    1953 – Andreas Vollenweider, Swiss harp player, and new age musician
    1957 – Russell Simmons, American businessman, founded Def Jam Recordings
    1967 – Liev Schreiber, American actor
    1976 – Alicia Silverstone, American actress
    1979 – Rachael Leigh Cook, American actress
    1989 – Dakota Johnson, American actress

    October 4th History

    1535 – The first complete English-language Bible (the Coverdale Bible) was printed, translated by William Tyndale and Myles Coverdale.

    1876 – Texas A&M University opened as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas.

    1883 – First run of the Orient Express, from Paris to Giurgiu in Romania via Munich and Vienna.

    1895 – The first U.S. Open Men’s Golf Championship was played at the Newport Country Club in Newport, Rhode Island.

    October 4, 1935 Birthday (fictional) Minerva McGonagall, Harry Potter

    1941 – Norman Rockwell’s Willie Gillis character debuted on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post.

    1957 – Leave It To Beaver premiered.

    1961 – The Alvin Show premiered (Alvin, Simon, Theodore, and Dave)

    1965 – Pope Paul VI’s visit to New York got television coverage on all 3 American networks. The Papal Mass at Yankee Stadium was broadcast in color.

    1980 – #1 Hit October 4, 1980 – October 24, 1980: Queen – Another One Bites the Dust

    1980 – Heathcliff premiered on ABC Saturday morning

    1988 – Televangelist Jim Bakker was indicted for fraud.

    1990 – Beverly Hills, 90210 premiered on FOX

    2003 – #1 Hit October 4, 2003 – December 5, 2003: Beyonce featuring Sean Paul – Baby Boy

    2004 – SpaceShipOne won the Ansari X Prize, for private spaceflight, by being the first private craft to fly into space.

    Today’s Random Trivia and Shower Thoughts

    The “Molotov cocktail” was named by Finnish soldiers fighting the Soviet invasion of 1939/1940. It was named after the Soviet Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov.

    The first person offered the role of John McClane in Die Hard was Frank Sinatra. #contractualobligation

    16 ounces Alpo = 1 dog pound

    It must have been awkward for Jessie after his friend wrote that song about his girl.

    Crayola means “oily chalk.”

    Shakespeare used the word honorificabilitudinitatibus in Love’s Labour’s Lost. It basically means ‘honorable, and the word was invented in the 9th century.

    If The Count from Sesame Street bit someone would they become a muppet?

    Facebook has a ‘poke’ button, but what they should have is a ‘slap the crap out of this person’ button

    ‘Odontophobia’ is the fear of teeth.

    A group of Eels is called a Swarm or Bed or Fry.

    No matter how much you push the envelope, it’ll still be stationery.

    Sean Connery wore a toupee in every James Bond film that he starred in.

    If you’re not making mistakes, you’re not trying hard enough.

    More Pop Culture History Resources

  • October 3 in Pop Culture History

    October 3 in Pop Culture History

    October 3rd History, Trivia, and Fun Facts

    October 3rd History Highlights

    • 1922 – Mrs. Rebecca Felton was the first female US Senator (Georgia, for two days)
    • 1955 – The Mickey Mouse Club premiered on ABC
    • 1990 – Germany Reunified as the Federal Republic of Germany
    • 1974 – Frank Robinson was named the first African-American MLB manager (Cleveland Indians)
    • If you were born on October 3rd,
      You were likely conceived the week of… January 10th (same year)

    The Mickey Mouse Club

    The Mickey Mouse Club was hosted by head Mousketeeer (and adult) Jimmie Dodd. The main cast members were called Mouseketeers, the most popular of the Mouseketeers were the Red Team, which was kept under contract for the entire run of the show (1955–1959), and its members included:

    Sharon Baird, Bobby Burgess, Lonnie Burr, Tommy Cole, Annette Funicello, Darlene Gillespie, Cubby O’Brien, Karen Pendleton, Doreen Tracey, Cheryl Holdridge (second and third year), Nancy Abbate (only first year), Johnny Crawford (only first year), Dennis Day (first and second year), Mike Smith (only first year), Jay-Jay Solari (only second year), Don Underhill (only first year)

    October 3rd is…

    Butterfly and Hummingbird Day
    Card Making Day
    Caramel Custard Day
    Look at the Leaves Day
    Techies Day

    October 3rd Birthday Quotes

    “We all have to go through hard times. Tragedies. Those are given to us to see what we’re going to do with them.”
    – Gwen Stefani

    “At any given moment, public opinion is a chaos of superstition, misinformation, and prejudice.”
    – Gore Vidal

    “You see, we are here, as far as I can tell, to help each other – our brothers, our sisters, our friends, our enemies. That’s to help each other, not hurt each other.”
    – Stevie Ray Vaughan

    “Teenagers are people who act like babies if they’re not treated like adults.”
    – Harvey Kurtzman

    “I’m just grateful to be on this planet. I have no enemies that I know of. I’m just the guy who makes happy.”
    – Chubby Checker

    “I just find things that work and embellish them.”
    – Lindsey Buckingham

    “You know what the most destructive force in the universe is? Regret.”
    – Tommy Lee

    October 3rd Birthdays

    1858 – Eleonora Duse, Italian-American actress (died in 1924)
    1924 – Harvey Kurtzman, American cartoonist (died in 1993)
    1925 – Gore Vidal, American novelist, screenwriter, and critic (died in 2012)
    1938 – Eddie Cochran, American singer-songwriter (died in 1960)
    1940 – Alan O’Day, American singer-songwriter (died in 2013)
    1941 – Chubby Checker, American singer-songwriter
    1949 – Lindsey Buckingham, American singer-songwriter
    1951 – Keb’ Mo’, American blues musician and songwriter
    1954 – Al Sharpton, American minister, and political activist
    1954 – Stevie Ray Vaughan, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (died in 1990)
    1959 – Jack Wagner, American actor, and singer
    1962 – Tommy Lee, Greek-American singer-songwriter and drummer
    1967 – Rob Liefeld, American comic book author, and illustrator
    1969 – Gwen Stefani, American singer-songwriter
    1973 – Lena Headey, British actress
    1983 – Tessa Thompson, American actress
    1988 – Alicia Vikander, Swedish actress

    October 3rd History

    1863 – The last Thursday in November was declared as Thanksgiving Day by US President Abraham Lincoln.

    1872 – The Bloomingdale brothers opened their first store at 938 Third Avenue, in New York City.

    1949 – WERD, the first black-owned radio station in the United States, opened in Atlanta. WERD was at 860 AM and is now WAEC.

    1952 – The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet debuted

    1955 – Captain Kangaroo premiered on CBS

    1955 – The Mickey Mouse Club premiered on ABC

    1957 – The California State Superior Court ruled that Allen Ginsberg’s Howl and Other Poems was not obscene.

    1960 – The Andy Griffith Show premiered on CBS

    1961 – The Dick Van Dyke Show premiered on CBS

    1985 – The Space Shuttle Atlantis made its first flight.

    1988 – Turner Network Television (TNT) began on cable, with Gone With The Wind

    1992- Singer Sinead O’Conner stirred up controversy when she ripped up a picture of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live

    1995 – More than 150 million people tuned in for the announcement of the verdict in the O.J. Simpson trial. The not-guilty verdict was met with both praise and criticism. So many people (100 million+) were watching/listening to the O.J. Simpson verdict that it cost an estimated $480 million in lost productivity.

    1998 – #1 Hit October 3, 1998 – October 16, 1998: MonicaThe First Night

    2004 – Desperate Housewives premiered on ABC

    2015 – #1 Hit October 3, 2015 – November 13, 2015: The WeekndThe Hills

    2021 – Ruth Hamilton was asleep in her home in British Columbia when she awoke to the sound of her dog barking, followed by “an explosion.” 1 1/2 pound meteor had landed on her bed.

    #1 Hit October 3, 2020 – October 9, 2020: DynamiteBTS

    Today’s Random Trivia and Shower Thoughts

    As of 2014, Ashrita Furman had set 551 official Guinness Records and currently holds nearly 200 records, including the record for holding the most Guinness world records.

    The Capital of Kuwait is Kuwait City

    We live in a world where lemonade is made from Artificial Flavors and Furniture Polish is made from real Lemons.

    NOAA announced it was to start using lowercase letters in forecasts by saying “NOAA’S NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS WILL STOP YELLING AT YOU”

    “Normally, someone would have to go to a bowling alley to meet someone of your stature.” – Hobson (John Gielgud) #moviequotes

    The Canadian $100 bill featured an Asian woman on the back using a microscope. People complained that it was stereotyping Asians as being good at technology. She was replaced with a Caucasian woman, and then more people complained that Caucasians were being favored.

    “Nobody puts Baby in a corner.” – Johnny Castle (Patrick Swayze) in Dirty Dancing, 1987

    “Goodbye Kid. Hurry back!” – Humphrey Bogart (spoken to wife Lauren Bacall as she left his bedside to go pick up their children) #LastWords

    In 1989’s “The Little Mermaid” Scuttle’s name for a fork was “Dinglehopper.”

    US President #20 James Garfield (1881-1881) President Garfield was shot by Charles Guiteau, a lawyer upset with Garfield because he denied Guiteau a diplomatic post. He probably died from the doctors’ poking and prodding and infection, as the bullet was lodged in a NOT life-threatening location!

    Chevy Chase – Real Name: Cornelius Crane Chase

    More Pop Culture History Resources

  • October 2 in Pop Culture History

    October 2 in Pop Culture History

    October 2nd History, Trivia, and Fun Facts

    October 2nd History Highlights

    • 1789 – The United States Bill of Rights was sent to the 13 States for ratification.
    • 1967 – Thurgood Marshall was sworn in as the first African-American justice of the United States Supreme Court.
    • 1972 – (fiction) – Phileas Fogg places his wager of 20 thousand pounds that he could travel Around the World in 80 Days.
    • 1950 – The Peanuts comic strip, by Charles Schulz, debuted
    • October 2 Birthday (fictional) Snoopy, Peanuts
    • If you were born on October 2nd,
      You were likely conceived the week of… January 9th (same year)

    Nat Turner’s Rebellion

    Nat Turner was an American slave who led the movement against slavery in the United States during the Civil War and died on November 11, 1831, in Jerusalem, Virginia. Nat Turner was born a slave in New Orleans, Louisiana, the son of a black man and a white woman.

    A deeply religious man, Nat Turner believed that he was called by God to lead African-Americans out of slavery. Turner was a lay minister, who believed that God had called him to help lead black people out of bondage, began to lead a slave revolt in his master’s house. In August 1831, he led a slave revolt in Virginia that killed 60 whites, including his owner, Joseph Travis. The revolt and its consequences are said to have been the largest slave revolt in the history of the USA and one of the most successful slave revolts in history. Nat Turner, who was born into slavery in Southampton County, Virginia, first escaped from his master’s house in 1821 at the age of 21.

    The Southampton Insurrection took place in Southampton County, Virginia, in August 1831, led by Nat Turner. The insurrectionists killed between 55 and 65 people, primarily whites. The rebellion was put down within a few days. The rebellion was effectively suppressed at Belmont Plantation on the morning of August 23, 1831. Turner was arrested, imprisoned, tried, sentenced, and sentenced to death on November 5, 1831, for his role in the slave revolt against the plantation owner.

    For African Americans, Nat Turner has become, and remains, one of the most important figures in the history of civil rights. Nat Turner is widely regarded as a key figure in American history.

    October 2nd is…

    Feast of Guardian Angels Day
    French Fried Scallops Day
    Day of Non-Violence
    Fried Scallops Day
    Phileas Fogg Wager Day
    World Farm Animals Day
    World No Alcohol Day
    World Smile Day

    October 2nd Birthday Quotes

    “Good communication is the bridge between confusion and clarity.”
    – Nat Turner

    “One doesn’t stop seeing. One doesn’t stop framing. It doesn’t turn off and turn on. It’s on all the time.”
    – Annie Leibovitz

    “Carefully watch your thoughts, for they become your words. Manage and watch your words, for they will become your actions. Consider and judge your actions, for they have become your habits. Acknowledge and watch your habits, for they shall become your values. Understand and embrace your values, for they become your destiny.”
    – Mahatma Gandhi

    “A memoir takes some particular threads, some incidents, some experience from a person’s life and gives an account of it.”
    – Richard Hell

    “Be sure that you first preach by the way you live. If you do not, people will notice that you say one thing but live otherwise, and your words will bring only cynical laughter and a derisive shake of the head.”
    – Carlo Borromeo

    “I decided honestly that comic art is an art form in itself. It reflects the life and times more accurately and actually is more artistic than magazine illustration – since it is entirely creative. An illustrator works with camera and models; a comic artist begins with a white sheet of paper and dreams up his own business – he is playwright, director, editor, and artist at once.”
    – Alex Raymond

    October 2nd Birthdays

    1538 – Charles Borromeo, Italian cardinal and saint (died in 1584)
    1800 – Nat Turner, American slave and uprising leader (died in 1831)
    1869 – Mahatma Gandhi, Indian freedom fighter and philosopher (died in 1948)
    1890 – Groucho Marx, American comedian, and actor (died in 1977)
    1897 – Bud Abbott, American comedian (died in 1974)
    1909 – Alex Raymond, American cartoonist, creator of Flash Gordon (died in 1956)
    1928 – George ‘Spanky’ McFarland, American actor (died in 1993)
    1937 – Johnnie Cochran, American lawyer (died in 2005)
    1938 – Rex Reed, American film critic
    1945 – Don McLean, American singer-songwriter
    1948 – Avery Brooks, American actor
    1949 – Richard Hell, American singer-songwriter
    1949 – Annie Leibovitz, American photographer
    1950 – Mike Rutherford, English guitarist, and songwriter
    1951 – Sting, English singer-songwriter, bass player, and actor
    1954 – Lorraine Bracco, American actress
    1969 – Mitch English, American talk show host
    1970 – Kelly Ripa, American actress, and talk show host

    October 2nd History

    October 2 Birthday (fictional) Snoopy, Peanuts

    1187

    Saladin captured Jerusalem from Balian of Ibelin.

    1872
    October 2, 1872 (fiction) Phileas Fogg began his trip around the world, Around the World in 80 Days, Book

    1893
    Cheniere Caminada Hurricane, Louisiana

    1950
    Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz was first published.

    1955
    Alfred Hitchcock premiered on CBS

    1958
    The Huckleberry Hound Show premiered in syndication

    1959
    The anthology series The Twilight Zone premiered on CBS.

    1965
    #1 Hit October 2, 1965 – October 8, 1965: The McCoys – Hang On Sloopy

    1968
    Redwood National and State Parks: Established on October 2, 1968, in California, this park system covers 139,000 acres. Known for its towering old-growth redwood trees, some of the tallest trees on Earth.

    The Tlatelolco massacre took place in Mexico City. 30-300 student protesters and supporters were killed.

    1971
    #1 Hit October 2, 1971 – November 5, 1971: Rod Stewart – Maggie May / Reason to Believe

    1982
    #1 Hit October 2, 1982 – October 29, 1982: John Cougar – Jack and Diane

    2000
    Triple Play (3 cars) was played on The Price is Right for the first time.

    2002
    The Beltway sniper attacks began. Paul LaRuffa, a 55-year-old pizzeria owner, was shot six times at close range – he survived, but 17 other people did not.

    2006
    Charles Carl Roberts murdered five school girls in a shooting at an Amish school in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania

    2010
    #1 Hit October 2, 2010 – October 29, 2010: Bruno Mars – Just the Way You Are

    Today’s Random Trivia and Shower Thoughts

    The state of Michigan is only 58% land, with the other 42% being comprised of bodies of water.

    7 authors have had a book hit #1 on both the New York Times Fiction and Non-Fiction Best Sellers list: John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, Mitch Albom, William Styron, Irving Wallace, Dr. Seuss, and Jimmy Buffett.

    Fredric Baur invented the Pringles can. When he passed away in 2008, his ashes were buried in one.

    The difference between a cemetery and a graveyard is cemeteries are considered burial grounds while the older term graveyards is considered burial grounds attached to a church.

    “give them an inch and they’ll take a mile” USED to be “give them an inch and they’ll take an ell”: an “ell” was a unit of measurement equal to about 37 inches

    The Capital of Kyrgyzstan is Bishkek

    Glass has been recycled for almost 3,000 years. It never wears out as a raw material.

    I imagine that once computers develop genuine self-awareness they’ll also develop existential angst, insecurity, neurosis, low self-esteem, and generalized anxiety.

    A group of Herons is called a Sedge or Siege or Hedge.

    TV Quotes… “Say good night, Gracie” (George Burns) on “The Burns & Allen Show”

    Rotten Tomatoes is owned by Warner Bros.

    The language spoken in the last three lines of The Beatles’ “Sun King,” is actually nonsense. It is a mixture of faux-romance words that “sounded vaguely like something.”

    Chipotle is not its own type of chile, it’s actually smoke-dried jalapeño.

    More Pop Culture History Resources

  • October in Pop Culture History

    October in Pop Culture History

    October History, Facts and Trivia

    October History Highlights

    • October Gemstone: Opal
    • October Flower: Calendula
    • The Zodiac signs for October are Libra or Scorpio (October 23 -31)

    Traditional October Information

    It’s weird that October isn’t the eighth month, isn’t it?

    October, the tenth month of the current Gregorian calendar and the second month of Autumn’s rule derives its name from octo, the Latin word meaning eight, as October was the eighth month of the old Roman calendar. The traditional birthstone amulets of October are opal, rose sapphire, and tourmaline; and the calendula is the month?s traditional flower.

    October is shared by the astrological signs of Libra the Scales (or Balance) and Scorpio the Scorpion, and is sacred to the following Pagan deities: Cernunnos, Hecate, the Morrigan, Osiris, and the Wiccan Goddess in Her dark aspect as the Crone.

    During the month of October, the Great Solar Wheel of the Year is turned to Halloween (Samhain Eve), one of the four Grand Sabbats celebrated each year by Wiccans and modern Witches throughout the world.”
    – Secrets of a Witch

    Hawaii has a special October event called “the Aloha Festival,” sometimes described as the “Mardi Gras of the Pacific.”

    Columbus Day is celebrated the second Monday every October.
    Germany’s Oktoberfest originally began on October 17, 1810, the wedding day of King Ludwig I.

    The annual festival starts much earlier, often in September. In America, special holidays start earlier well. Christmas celebrations and sales start in September and even July in some department stores.
    Daylight Savings Time ends every year at 2:00 A.M. local time on the last Sunday of October

    October is…

    Adopt A Shelter Dog Month
    American Cheese Month
    American Pharmacist Month
    Apple Month
    Arts & Humanities Month
    National Applejack Month
    Breast Cancer Awareness Month
    Caramel Month
    Celiac Disease Awareness Month
    Clergy Appreciation Month
    Cookbook Month
    Cookie Month
    Cyber Security Awareness Month
    Dessert Month
    Domestic Violence Awareness Month
    Dwarfism/Little People Awareness Month
    Eczema Awareness Month
    Filipino-American History Month
    German-American Heritage Month
    Hispanic Heritage Month
    Italian-American Heritage Month
    Lupus Awareness Month
    National Arts & Humanities Month
    National Down Syndrome Awareness Month
    National Roller Skating Month
    Pasta Month
    Pickled Peppers Month
    Pizza Month
    Polish-American Heritage Month
    Popcorn Popping Month
    Pork Month
    Positive Awareness Month
    Pretzel Month
    National Month of Sarcasm
    Seafood Month
    Squirrel Awareness & Appreciation Month
    Vegetarian Month
    Scorpio is the eighth astrological sign in the Zodiac, represented by the Scorpion. It is associated with the element of water and is considered a fixed sign. Those born under this sign are said to be intense, passionate, and mysterious. The planet Pluto rules Scorpio, and its corresponding astrological period is typically from October 23 to November 21. Scorpio is known for being intense, passionate and mysterious. They are also known for their strong willpower and determination. They can be jealous and have a hard time trusting others. They are also known for their strong sense of intuition and their ability to uncover secrets.

    October Quotes

    “Just before the death of flowers, and before they are buried in snow,
    There comes a festival season when nature is all aglow.”
    – unknown

    “There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on the feelings, as now in October.”
    – Nathaniel Hawthorne

    “Rain in October means wind in December.”
    – Farmer saying

    “When birds and badgers are fat in October, expect a cold winter.
    When berries are many in October beware a hard winter.”
    – unknown

    “All things on earth point home in old October: sailors to sea, travelers to walls and fences, hunters to field and hollow and the long voice of the hounds, the lover to the love he has forsaken.”
    – Thomas Wolfe

    “In October dung your fields, and your land its wealth shall yield.”
    -Farmer saying

    “The falling leaves drift by the window
    The autumn leaves of red and gold
    I see your lips, the summer kisses
    The sun-burned hands I used to hold

    Since you went away the days grow long
    And soon I’ll hear old winter’s song
    But I miss you most of all my darling
    When autumn leaves start to fall.”
    – Johnny Mercer and Jacques Prévert in Autumn Leaves

    “October is nature’s funeral month. Nature glories in death more than in life. The month of departure is more beautiful than the month of coming – October Than May. Every green thing loves to die in bright colors.”
    – Henry Ward Beecher

    “If ducks do slide at Hallowtide,
    At Christmas they will swim;
    If ducks do swim at Hallowtide
    At Christmas, they will slide.”
    – unknown

    “Always will there be Twenty-nine fine days in October.”

    “If the October moon comes without frost, expect no frost till the moon of November.”
    – Farmer saying

    “October. This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks in. The others are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August, and February.”
    -Mark Twain

    “Listen! The wind is rising, and the air is wild with leaves, we have had our summer evenings, now for October eves!”
    – Humbert Wolfe

    “You kind of took it for granted around the Yankees that there was always going to be baseball in October.”
    -Whitey Ford

    October History

    History for October 1
    331 BC – Alexander the Great defeated Darius III of Persia in the Battle of Gaugamela, bringing about the fall of the Persian Empire.

    1843 – London’s The News of the World began publication.

    1880 – John Philip Sousa, the first recorded popular music star, became the leader of the United States Marine Band.

    1880 – First electric lamp factory was opened by Thomas Edison.

    1890 – Yosemite National Park was established by the U.S. Congress.

    1891 – Stanford University opened.

    1908 – For $825 each, Ford’s Model T car was put on the market.

    1918 – Arab forces under T. E. Lawrence, also known as “Lawrence of Arabia”, captured Damascus.

    1940 – The Pennsylvania Turnpike opened to traffic. It is considered the first US superhighway.

    1948 – Over Fargo, North Dakota, WW II pilot George F. Gorman reported ‘playing chicken” with a blinking orb of light UFO. It was visually seen by people in the control tower but did not show up on radar.

    1949 – The People’s Republic of China was established and declared by Mao Zedong.

    1955 – The Honeymooners premiered on CBS

    1957 – First appearance of In God We Trust on U.S. paper currency, on one-dollar bills.

    1958 – The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) became the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

    1962 – First broadcast of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.

    1971 – Walt Disney World opened near Orlando, Florida.

    1979 – Pope John Paul II began his first pastoral visit to the United States.

    1989 – Denmark introduced the world’s first legal modern same-sex civil union, called a “registered partnership”.

    1992 – Cartoon Network began broadcasting. The first cartoon, outside of Droopy Dog’s introduction, was Bugs Bunny in Rhapsody Rabbit.

    1996 – Animal Planet made its debut.

    1982 – Epcot opened at Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida.

    1982 – Sony launched the first consumer compact disc player (model CDP-101).

    1999 – The infamous “You Fool” episode of Hollywood Squares aired.

    2006 – Dexter premiered on Showtime

    2010 – Sony launched Sony Movie Channel

    2013 – The United States federal government shutdown of 2013 (October 1-16) affected many operations for the US government

    History for October 2
    1187 – Saladin captured Jerusalem from Balian of Ibelin.

    1893 – Cheniere Caminada Hurricane, Louisiana

    1925 – John Logie Baird performed the first test of a working television system.

    1950 – Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz was first published.

    1955 – Alfred Hitchcock premiered on CBS

    1958 – The Huckleberry Hound Show premiered, in syndication

    1959 – The anthology series The Twilight Zone premiered on CBS.

    1967 – Thurgood Marshall was sworn in as the first African-American justice of the United States Supreme Court.

    1968 – The Tlatelolco massacre took place in Mexico City. 30-300 student protesters and supporters were killed.

    2000 – Triple Play (3 cars) was played for the first time on The Price is Right.

    2002 – The Beltway sniper attacks began. Paul LaRuffa, a 55-year-old pizzeria owner, was shot six times at close range – he survived, but 17 other people did not.

    2006 – Five school girls were murdered by Charles Carl Roberts in a shooting at an Amish school in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania

    History for October 3
    1849 – Edgar Allan Poe was found delirious in a gutter in Baltimore under mysterious circumstances. It was the last time he is seen in public before his death.

    1863 – The last Thursday in November was declared as Thanksgiving Day by US President Abraham Lincoln.

    1872 – The Bloomingdale brothers opened their first store at 938 Third Avenue, in New York City.

    1932 – Iraq gained independence from the United Kingdom.

    1949 – WERD, the first black-owned radio station in the United States, opened in Atlanta. WERD was at 860 AM, and is now WAEC.

    1952 – The United Kingdom successfully tested a nuclear weapon, becoming the world’s third nuclear power.

    1955 – Captain Kangaroo premiered on CBS

    1955 – The Mickey Mouse Club premiered on ABC

    1957 – The California State Superior Court ruled that Allen Ginsberg’s Howl and Other Poems was not obscene.

    1960 – The Andy Griffith Show premiered on CBS

    1961 – The Dick Van Dyke Show premiered on CBS

    1985 – The Space Shuttle Atlantis made its first flight.

    1988 – Turner Network Television (TNT) began on cable, with Gone With The Wind.

    1992- Singer Sinead O’Conner stirred up controversy when she ripped up a picture of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live

    1995 – More than 150 million people tuned in for the announcement of the verdict in the O.J. Simpson trial. The not guilty verdict was met with both praise and criticism.

    2004 – Desperate Housewives premiered on ABC

    History for October 4
    1535 – The first complete English-language Bible (The Coverdale Bible) was printed, translated by William Tyndale and Myles Coverdale.

    1636 – The Swedish Army defeated the armies of Saxony and the Holy Roman Empire at the Battle of Wittstock.

    1876 – Texas A&M University opened as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas.

    1883 – First run of the Orient Express, from Paris to Giurgiu in Romania via Munich and Vienna.

    1895 – The first U.S. Open Men’s Golf Championship was played at the Newport Country Club in Newport, Rhode Island.

    1941 – Norman Rockwell’s Willie Gillis character debuted on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post.

    1957 – The USSR launched Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth.

    1963 – Hurricane Flora killed 6,000 people in Cuba and Haiti.

    1965 – Pope Paul VI’s visit to New York got television coverage on all 3 American networks. The Papal Mass at Yankee Stadium was broadcast in color.

    1980 – Heathcliff premiered on ABC Saturday morning.

    1983 – Richard Noble set a new land speed record of 633.468 miles per hour, driving Thrust2 at the Black Rock Desert in Nevada.

    1985 – The Free Software Foundation was founded in Massachusetts, United States.

    1988 – Televangelist Jim Bakker was indicted for fraud.

    1990 – Beverly Hills 90210 premiered on FOX

    2004 – SpaceShipOne won the Ansari X Prize, for private spaceflight, by being the first private craft to fly into space.

    2006 – Wikileaks was launched by Julian Assange.

    History for October 5
    1550 – Foundation of Concepción, Chile.

    1857 – The City of Anaheim, California was founded.

    1944 – Suffrage was extended to women in France.

    1945 – Hollywood Black Friday – A six-month strike by Hollywood set decorators turns into a bloody riot at the gates of Warner Brothers’ studios.

    1947 – The first televised White House address was given by US President Harry S. Truman.

    1950 – You Bet Your Life, featuring Groucho Marx, premiered on NBC.

    1962 – Dr. No, the first in the James Bond film series, was released.

    1962 – The Beatles’ first single, Love Me Do, backed with P.S. I Love You, was released in the United Kingdom.

    1966 There was a partial core meltdown at the Enrico Fermi demonstration nuclear breeder reactor, near Detroit, Michigan.

    1969 – The first episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus aired on BBC One. It ran 45 episodes, until 1974.

    1970 – The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) began broadcasting and National Educational Television (NET) closed.

    1982 – Johnson & Johnson began a nationwide product recall in the US for all products in its Tylenol brand after several bottles in Chicago were found to have been laced with cyanide, resulting in seven deaths.

    1984 – Marc Garneau became the first Canadian in space, flying aboard the US Space Shuttle Challenger.

    1991 – The first official version of the Linux kernel (version 0.02) was released.

    2001 – Barry Bonds surpassed Mark McGwire’s single-season home run total with the 71st and 72nd home runs.

    2011 – American Horror Story premiered on FX

    History for October 6
    1723- Benjamin Franklin arrived in Philadelphia (age of 17).

    1876 – The American Library Association was founded.

    1927 – Opening of The Jazz Singer with its Vitaphone sound-on-disc system, in New York City. It was the first “talkie” hit film.

    1948 (Earthquake) Ashgabat, Soviet Union

    1948 – The first television network soap opera, Faraway Hill, was broadcast by the DuMont Network.

    1979 – Pope John Paul II became the first pontiff to visit the White House.

    1981 – Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat was murdered by Khalid Islambouli.

    1985 – Jem and the Holograms debuted, in syndication

    1986 – Double Dare premiered on Nickelodeon.

    1995 – 51 Pegasi was discovered to be the second major star (along with our Sun) to have a planet orbiting around it.

    2000 – CSI: Crime Scene Investigation premiered on CBS

    2004 – Ghost Hunters premiered on Syfy

    2007 – Jason Lewis completed the first human-powered circumnavigation of the globe (pedal power).

    History for October 7
    3761 BC – Today was the first day of creation, according to the Jewish Talmudic Calendar.

    1737 (Cyclone) India

    1919 – KLM, the Netherlands official airline, was founded.

    1933 – Air France began, with the merger of 5 smaller French airlines.

    1950 – Mother Teresa opened the Missionary of Charity.

    1952 – WFIL in Philadelphia introduced Bandstand (later called American Bandstand)

    1955 – American poet Allen Ginsberg performed his poem Howl for the first time at the Six Gallery in San Francisco.

    1958 – The US manned space-flight project was renamed, Project Mercury. It was originally called Project Astronaut.

    1985 – The Achille Lauro was hijacked by Palestine Liberation Front. The hijackers killed wheel-chair bound Jewish-American passenger Leon Klinghoffer, throwing him overboard after shooting him.

    1988 – An Inupiat hunter discovered three gray whales trapped under the ice in Barrow, Alaska, the US leading to a multinational effort to ‘free the whales’.

    1996 – The Fox News Channel began broadcasting.

    2003 – The governor of California, Gray Davis, was recalled in favor of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    History for October 8
    1860 – Telegraph line between Los Angeles and San Francisco began operating.

    1767 – Surveying for the Mason-Dixon Line separating Maryland from Pennsylvania was completed.

    1881 – Haighong Typhoon, Vietnam

    1871 – Peshtigo Fire, Wisconsin (2000 estimated dead)

    1871 – Great Michigan Fire (500? killed)

    1871 – Peshtigo, Wisconsin Fire (over 1200 killed)

    1871 – Four major fires break out on the shores of Lake Michigan in Chicago, Peshtigo, Wisconsin, Holland, Michigan, and Manistee, Michigan including the Great Chicago Fire, and the much deadlier Peshtigo Fire.

    1956 – New York Yankees’ Don Larsen pitched the only perfect game in a World Series, against the Brooklyn Dodgers.

    1967 – Che Guevara and his men were captured in Bolivia.

    1982 – Cats, based on Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats by T. S. Eliot, opened on Broadway and ran for nearly 18 years before closing on September 10, 2000.

    1984 – The Burning Bed starring Farrah Fawcett, aired on NBC

    1986 – The Fox Broadcasting Company became the US’ fourth commercial broadcast television network, with The Late Show, hosted by Joan Rivers.

    2001 – US President George W. Bush announced the establishment of the Office of Homeland Security.

    2005 (Earthquake) Kashmir, Pakistan

    History for October 9
    768 – Carloman I and Charlemagne were both crowned Kings of The Franks. Carloman died in 771, and Charlemagne reigned until 814.

    1824 – Slavery was abolished in Costa Rica.

    1873 – The US Naval Institute was established.

    1888 – The Washington Monument officially opened to the public.

    1919 – The Cincinnati Reds won the World Series, and eight White Sox players were later accused of intentionally losing games in exchange for money from gamblers.

    1967 – Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara was executed in Bolivia.

    1980 – Pope John Paul II met and shook hands with the Dalai Lama in Vatican City.

    1992 – The Peekskill Meteorite (about 24 pounds) landed in the driveway of the Knapp residence in Peekskill, New York, destroying the family’s 1980 Chevrolet Malibu.

    2006 – North Korea may have tested its first nuclear device.

    2012 – The Pakistani Taliban made a failed attempt to assassinate 15-year-old Malala Yousafzai on her way home from school.

    History for October 10
    1780 – The Great Hurricane of 1780 killed 20,000 to 30,000 people in the Caribbean region.

    1845 – In Annapolis, Maryland, the Naval School (now the United States Naval Academy) opened.

    1871 – The Great Chicago Fire finally dissipated.

    1871 – Tau Epsilon Phi was founded at Columbia University (other organizations did not allow Jewish members)

    1918 – The Cloquet Fire, northern Minnesota, USA

    1957 – The finance minister of Ghana, Komla Agbeli Gbedemah, was refused service in a Howard Johnson’s restaurant in Dover, Delaware. It was a bit of an international incident. He later was invited to dine with US President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

    1964 – NBC aired the 1964 Summer Olympics opening ceremony at Tokyo, Japan, with the first time of live Olympic telecast program, by geostationary communication satellite, Syncom 3.

    1971 – Sold, dismantled, and moved to the United States, London Bridge reopened in Lake Havasu City, Arizona.

    1973 – Vice President of the US Spiro Agnew resigned, after being charged with evasion of federal income tax.

    1983 – Adam, a TV-movie about the mysterious disappearance of Adam Walsh, premiered on NBC

    2010 – Cable channel The Hub (Now Discovery Family) made its debut in the United States.

    2012 – Nashville premiered on ABC

    History for October 11
    1138 (Earthquake) Aleppo, Syria

    1767 – Surveying for the Mason – Dixon line, separating Maryland from Pennsylvania was completed.

    1811 – Juliana began operation as the first steam-powered ferry service between New York City, New York, and Hoboken, New Jersey.

    1852 – The University of Sydney, Australia’s oldest university, opened.

    1890 The Daughters of the American Revolution were founded, in Washington, DC.

    1899 – MLB’s Western League was renamed the American League.

    1984 – Aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger, astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan became the first American woman to perform a spacewalk.

    1958 – NASA launched the lunar probe Pioneer 1.

    1962 – Pope John XXIII convenes the Second Vatican Council, changing several rules, including saying The mass in the local languages and having the celebrant (priest) face the congregation.

    1973 – Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker were abducted by aliens in Mississippi, they told authorities.

    1984 – Astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan becomes the first American woman to perform a spacewalk, on the Space Shuttle Challenger.

    2001 – One of the first old companies to fall behind n the digital era, The Polaroid Corporation filed for federal bankruptcy protection.

    2006 – 30 Rock premiered on NBC

    History for October 12
    1692 – The Salem witch trials ended via a letter from Massachusetts Governor William Phips.

    1773 – America’s first insane asylum opened for ‘Persons of Insane and Disordered Minds’ in Virginia.

    1792 – The first celebration of Columbus Day in the US was held in New York City.

    1810 – Oktoberfest begins: In Germany, the Bavarian royal family invited the citizens of Munich to join the celebration of the marriage of Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria to Princess Therese von Sachsen-Hildburghausen.

    1823 – Charles Macintosh of Scotland began selling his ‘raincoat.’

    1918 – Cloquet Fire, Minnesota killed over 400 people.

    1950 – The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show debuted on CBS.

    1960 – Nikita Khrushchev famously pounded his shoe on a desk at United Nations General Assembly.

    1964 – The USSR launched Voskhod 1 into Earth orbit as the first spacecraft with a multi-person crew; it was the first flight without spacesuits.

    1979 – The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, the first of five books in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy comedy science fiction series by Douglas Adams was published. The Answer? 42.

    1994 – NASA lost radio contact with the Magellan spacecraft as it descended into the thick, acidic atmosphere of Venus.

    2000 – The USS Cole was badly damaged in Aden, Yemen, by two suicide bombers, killing 17 crew members and wounding at least 39.

    History for October 13
    1773 – The Whirlpool Galaxy, almost 25 million light-years away, was discovered by Charles Messier.

    1775 – The United States Continental Congress ordered the establishment of the Continental Navy (later renamed the United States Navy).

    1843 – B’nai B’rith was founded in New York City.

    1914 – In Major League Baseball’s World Series, the Boston Braves defeat the Philadelphia Athletics, 4 games to 0, at Fenway Park in Boston, completing the first World Series sweep in history.

    1917 – The 10 minute “Miracle of the Sun” was witnessed by an estimated 70,000 people in the Cova da Iria in Fátima, Portugal.

    1958 – Paddington Bear made his debut in A Bear Called Paddington.

    1963 (Volcano Eruption) Kuril Islands

    1991- Jennifer Lopez joined the cast of In Living Color as a Fly Girl. Jamie Foxx, Steve Park, and Shawn Wayans are also added to the cast.

    2010 – The 2010 Copiapo mining accident in Copiapo, Chile ended as all 33 miners came to the surface after surviving a record 69 days underground.

    History for October 14
    1926 – Winnie the Pooh, by A. A. Milne was first published.

    1881 – Eyemouth Windstorm Disaster, Scotland

    1908 – The Chicago Cubs defeated the Detroit Tigers, 2-0, winning the World Series.

    1912 – Former President of the US, Theodore Roosevelt, was shot and mildly wounded by John Schrank. With the fresh wound and bullet in his chest, Roosevelt still gave his scheduled speech.

    1947 – Captain Chuck Yeager flew a Bell X-1 rocket-powered (and experimental) aircraft, the Glamorous Glennis, faster than the speed of sound over the high desert of Southern California.

    1964 – Martin Luther King, Jr. received the Nobel Peace Prize for striving to end racial inequality through non-violence.

    1972 – Kung Fu premiered on ABC

    1979 – The first Gay Rights March on Washington, CD – the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights, demanded”an end to all social, economic, judicial, and legal oppression of lesbian and gay people” and drew 200,000 people.

    1982 – President Ronald Reagan proclaimed the War on Drugs.

    1994 – Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, The Prime Minister of Israel, Yitzhak Rabin, and the Foreign Minister of Israel, Shimon Peres, received the Nobel Peace Prize for their role in the establishment of the Oslo Accords.

    1998 – Eric Rudolph was charged with six bombings including the 1996 Centennial Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta, Georgia.

    2003 – The ‘Steve Bartman Incident’ occurred during a Major League Baseball (MLB) in the eighth inning of Game 6 of the National League Championship Series game played between the Chicago Cubs and the Florida Marlins. Chicago lost. Steve caught a ball that was still in play.

    2007 – Keeping Up with the Kardashians premiered on E!

    History for October 15
    1582 – Pope Gregory XIII implemented the Gregorian calendar. In several countries (Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Spain) October 4 of that year was followed directly by October 15.

    1764 – Edward Gibbon observed a group of friars singing in the ruined Temple of Jupiter in Rome, which inspired him to begin work on The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

    1878 – The Edison Electric Light Company began operations.

    1888 – The “From Hell” letter sent by Jack the Ripper was received by the London authorities (Whitechapel Vigilance Committee).

    1951 – I Love Lucy premiered on CBS. It was filmed on three cameras, a TV first.

    1956 – Fortran, the first modern computer language, was shared with the coding community for the first time.

    1966 – The Black Panther Party was created by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale.

    1987 – Bob Barker, host of The Price Is Right, stopped dying his hair. The audience gave him a standing ovation when he came onstage, white-haired

    2000 – Curb Your Enthusiasm premiered on HBO

    2001 – Smallville premiered on The WB

    History for October 16
    1793 – Marie Antoinette, the widow of Louis XVI, was guillotined at the height of the French Revolution. The phrase “Let them eat cake” is often attributed to Marie but there is no evidence she ever said it.

    1846 – William T. G. Morton first demonstrated ether anesthesia at the Massachusetts General Hospital in the Ether Dome.

    1869 – The Cardiff Giant was “discovered” in Cardiff, New York. It was a hoax.

    1875 – Brigham Young University was founded in Provo, Utah.

    1916 – In Brooklyn, New York, Margaret Sanger opened the first family planning clinic in the United States.

    1923 – The Walt Disney Company was founded by Walt Disney and his brother, Roy Disney.

    1944 – Wally Walrus debuted in The Beach Nut, a Walter Lantz’s cartoon.

    1968 – Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave the Black Power salute at the Olympics.

    1978 – Karol Wojtyla was elected Pope John Paul II, the first non-Italian pontiff since 1523.

    1984 – Desmond Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

    1995 – The Million Man March took place in Washington, DC. Between 400,000 and 850,000 people marched.

    2012 – The extrasolar planet Alpha Centauri Bb was discovered.

    History for October 17
    1091 – The London Tornado of 1091 destroyed many buildings, and killed two people.

    1814 – The Great Beer Flood -More than 323,000 gallons of beer burst out of the Meux and Company Brewery and poured into the streets of St. Giles, London, England. 8 people were killed.

    1860 – First Open (Golf) Championship (referred to in the US as the British Open).

    1919 – Radio Corporation of America (RCA) incorporated.

    1931 – Al Capone was convicted of income tax evasion.

    1933 – Albert Einstein fled Nazi Germany and moved to the United States.

    1956 – The first commercial nuclear power station is officially opened in Sellafield, Cumbria, England.

    1956 – Donald Byrne and Bobby Fischer played a game of chess labeled The Game of the Century. Fischer beat Byrne.

    1958 – An Evening With Fred Astaire premiered, it was one the first “special” programs on television, and won nine Emmy Awards.

    1965 – The 1964-65 New York World’s Fair closed. Over 51 million people had attended the event.

    1966 – All of NBC’s news programming began airing in full-color.

    1973 – OPEC imposed an oil embargo against a number of Western countries.

    1979 – The Department of Education Organization Act was signed into law, creating the US Department of Education and the US Department of Health and Human Services.

    1979 – Mother Teresa won the Nobel Peace Prize.

    1989 (Earthquake) The Lome Prieta earthquake interrupted Game 3 of the World Series

    2005 – The Colbert Report premiered on Comedy Central

    2007 – Storm Chasers debuted on The Discovery Channel

    2008 – Ghost Adventures premiered on The Travel Channel

    History for October 18
    1386 – The University of Heidelberg opened.

    1620 – The Mayflower landed at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts.

    1851 – Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick was first published as The Whale.

    1867 – “Seward’s Folly” United States took possession of Alaska after purchasing it from Russia for $7.2 million.

    1898 – The United States took possession of Puerto Rico from Spain.

    1922 – The British Broadcasting Company (Corporation) BBC was founded.

    1945 – Argentine military officer and politician Juan Perón married actress Eva “Evita” Duarte.

    1954 – Texas Instruments introduced the first Transistor radio.

    1964 – Jackie Mason appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show and may have given Ed “the finger” on the air. He never appeared on the show again.

    1968 – The US Olympic Committee suspended Tommie Smith and John Carlos for giving a “Black Power” salute during a victory ceremony at the Mexico City games.

    1988 – Rosanne premiered on ABC

    History for October 19
    1512 – Martin Luther earned a doctorate of theology.

    1781 – At Yorktown, Virginia, representatives of British commander Lord Cornwallis handed over Cornwallis’ sword and formally surrendered to George Washington and the Comte de Rochambeau, ending the Revolutionary War.

    1798 – Chief Justice John Jay was sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States.

    1900 – Max Planck discovered the law of black-body radiation (Planck’s Law).

    1982 – St. Elsewhere premiered on NBC

    1987 – The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 22% (508 points), named Black Monday.

    2003 – Mother Teresa was beatified (the step before sainthood) by Pope John Paul II.

    2004 – The Biggest Loser premiered on NBC.

    2005 – Hurricane Wilma was the most intense Atlantic hurricane on record with a minimum pressure of 882 MB.

    2012 – Built in 1952, Big Tex, a 52-foot statue and icon in Dallas was destroyed by fire in the 2012 State Fair of Texas.

    History for October 20
    1720 – Caribbean pirate Calico Jack Rackham, one of the first pirates to use the “Jolly Roger”, was captured by the Royal Navy.

    1803 – The United States Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.

    1818 – The Convention of 1818 was signed between the US and the UK which settled the Canada/United States border on the 49th parallel for most of its length.

    1873 – Yale, Princeton, Columbia, and Rutgers universities drafted the (American) Football rules.

    1944 – Liquid natural gas exploded from storage tanks in Cleveland, killing 130 people.

    1951 – CBS began using the “Eyeball” logo.

    1968 – Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis.

    1977 – Lynyrd Skynyrd members Ronnie Van Zandt, Steve Gaines, and Cassie Gaines died in a plane crash. None were aged 27.

    1981 – Two police officers and a Brinks armored car guard are killed during an armed $1.6 million robbery in Rockland County, New York, carried out by members of the Black Liberation Army and Weather Underground.

    1991 – The Oakland Hills, California firestorm killed 25 people.

    2001 – Concert For New York: A Tribute To Heroes was broadcast on VH1 and other networks. It raised funds for the families of those killed by the September 11 terrorist attacks.

    2011 – The National Transitional Council rebel forces captured (in hiding) Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in his hometown of Sirte.

    History for October 21
    1520 – Ferdinand Magellan discovered a strait now known as Strait of Magellan in South America.

    1797 – In Boston Harbor, the 44-gun United States Navy frigate USS Constitution was launched. It was the third such vessel completed for the US Navy.

    1854 – Florence Nightingale and a staff of 38 nurses are sent to the Crimean War.

    1921 – The Sheik starring Rudolph Valentino, premiered in Los Angeles

    1921 – President Warren G. Harding delivered the first speech by a sitting US President against lynching in the Deep South.

    1940 – For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway was published.

    1959 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed an executive order transferring Wernher von Braun and other German scientists from the United States Army to NASA.

    1959 -The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, opened in New York City.

    1973 – John Paul Getty III’s ear was cut off by his kidnappers and sent to a newspaper in Rome, with a note – “This is Paul’s ear. If we don’t get some money within 10 days, then the other ear will arrive. In other words, he will arrive in little bits.”

    1973 – Fred Dryer of the Los Angeles Rams (later an actor) became the first player in NFL history to score two safeties in the same game.

    1978 – Frederick Valenteich (flying a Cessna 182 airplane) disappeared over Melbourne, Australia right after describing a UFO to the control tower. The last seventeen seconds of his transmission was described as ‘metallic scraping.’

    1994 – North Korea and the United States signed an agreement that required North Korea to stop its nuclear weapons program and agree to inspections. On October 9, 2006, North Korea announced it had successfully conducted its first nuclear test.

    1995 – Blind Melon’s Shannon Hoon died of a cocaine overdose

    History for October 22
    4004 BC – According to Ussher chronology, the world came into existence the night of October 22 in 4004 BC, a Saturday.

    362 – The temple of Apollo at Daphne, outside Antioch, (in modern-day Turkey) was destroyed in a fire.

    1746 – The College of New Jersey (renamed Princeton University in 1896) received its charter.

    1784 – Russia founded a colony on Kodiak Island, Alaska.

    1836 – Sam Houston was inaugurated as the first President of the Republic of Texas.

    1879 – Thomas Edison tested the first practical electric incandescent light bulb – it lasted 13 1/2 hours.

    1883 – The Metropolitan Opera House in New York City opened with a performance of Gounod’s Faust.

    1907 – Panic of 1907 – A run on the stock of the Knickerbocker Trust Company set events in motion that lead to depression.

    1926 – J. Gordon Whitehead punched magician Harry Houdini, while he was still preparing for it) in the stomach in Montreal, later causing his death.

    1934 – In East Liverpool, Ohio, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents shot and killed bank robber Pretty Boy Floyd.

    1962 – US President John F. Kennedy announced that American reconnaissance planes had found Soviet nuclear weapons in Cuba and that he had ordered a naval “quarantine” of the Communist nation.

    1964 – Jean-Paul Sartre was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, but turned down the honor because “a writer should not allow himself to be turned into an institution”.

    1966 – The Supremes become the first all-female music group to attain a No. 1 selling album: The Supremes A’ Go-Go.

    1976 – Red Dye No. 4 was banned by the US Food and Drug Administration.

    1978 – The inauguration of Pope John Paul II took place in Saint Peter’s Square.

    2001 – Grand Theft Auto III was released, creating a genre of open-world, action-adventure video games as well as spurring controversy around violence in new video games.

    History for October 23
    1850 – The first National Women’s Rights Convention opened in Worcester, Massachusetts.

    1861 – President Abraham Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus in Washington, D.C., for all military-related cases.

    1915 – Over 25,000 women marched on Fifth Avenue, NYC to advocate their right to vote.

    1917 – Lenin called for the October Revolution.

    1935 – Mobsters Dutch Schultz, Abe Landau, Otto Berman, and Bernard “Lulu” Rosencrantz are fatally shot at a saloon in Newark, New Jersey – The Chophouse Massacre.

    1946 – The United Nations General Assembly convened for the first time, in Flushing, Queens, New York City.

    1958 – The Smurfs, a fictional race of blue dwarves, by Peyo, was serialized in the French weekly Spirou magazine.

    1973 – US President Richard M. Nixon agreed to turn over subpoenaed audio tapes of his Oval Office conversations.

    1998 – Swatch Internet Time, a measure of 1000 “beats” per day was inaugurated by the Swatch Group. Instead of hours and minutes, the mean solar day is divided up into 1000 parts called “.beats”. Each beat lasts 1 minute and 26.4 seconds.

    2011 – Once Upon A Time premiered on ABC

    History for October 24
    1901 – Annie Edson Taylor, at age 63, became the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel.

    1902 (Volcano Eruption) Santa María.

    1926 – Harry Houdini’s last performance took place at the Garrick Theatre in Detroit.

    1929 – Stock market crash on the New York Stock Exchange “Black Thursday”

    1931 – Over the Hudson River, and connecting the Washington Heights, Manhattan in New York City to Fort Lee, New Jersey, the George Washington Bridge opened to public traffic.

    1946 – A camera onboard the V-2 No. 13 rocket took the first photograph of earth from outer space.

    1947 – Walt Disney testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee.

    2002 – Police arrested spree killers John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, ending the Beltway sniper attacks in the area around Washington, DC.

    2003 – Concorde made its last commercial flight.

    2008 – Presidential candidate Barack Obama aired a 30-minute infomercial on CBS, NBC, Fox, BET, Univision, MSNBC and TV One.

    2008 – Many of the world’s stock exchanges experienced their worst declines in history – “Bloody Friday”

    History for October 25
    1938 – Archbishop of Dubuque, Francis J. L. Beckman, denounced swing music as “a degenerated musical system, turned loose to gnaw away at the moral fiber of young people.”

    1940 – Benjamin O. Davis, Sr. was named the first African American general in the United States Army.

    1962 – Nelson Mandela was sentenced to five years in prison.

    1964 – The Rolling Stones appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show.

    1982 – Newhart premiered on CBS

    1983 – Microsoft released Word, version 1

    1993 – The Rocky Horror Picture Show made its television debut on FOX, featured an intercut live cast performance.

    History for October 26
    1774 – The First Continental Congress adjourned in Philadelphia.

    1775 – King George III of Great Britain went before Parliament to declare the American colonies in rebellion, and authorized a military response to stop the American Revolution.

    1776 – Benjamin Franklin went to France to seek French support for the American Revolution.

    1825 – From Albany, New York to Lake Erie, the Erie Canal opened.

    1861 – The Pony Express officially closed.

    1881 – The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral takes place at Tombstone, Arizona. The “OK” probably referred to two families, Ormsby & Kimberly, who owned the nearby corral.

    1936 – The first electric generator at Hoover Dam went into operation.

    1958 – Pan American Airways made the first commercial flight of the Boeing 707, from New York City to Paris, France.

    1984 – V (the series) premiered on NBC

    1984 – Stephanie Fae Beauclair (October 14, 1984 – November 15, 1984) “Baby Fae” received a heart transplant from a baboon.

    2001 – The United States passed the first Patriot Act.

    History for October 27
    312 – Constantine the Great saw the Vision of the Cross. “In this sign, you shall conquer”

    1275 – Amsterdam, in the Kingdom of the Netherlands, was founded.

    1682 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was founded.

    1904 – The first underground New York City Subway line opened.

    1955 – Rebel Without a Cause, starring James Dean was released. It premiered the night before, at the Astor Theater in New York.

    1961 – NASA tested the first Saturn I rocket in Mission Saturn-Apollo 1.

    1964 – Ronald Reagan delivered his “A Time for Choosing” speech on behalf of Republican presidential candidate, Barry Goldwater.

    1966 – It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown aired for the first time (on CBS)

    1996 – Pop-Up Video premieres on VH1.

    1997 – Stock markets around the world crashed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 554.26 points (7.18%) to 7,161.15.

    History for October 28
    1420 – Beijing became officially designated the capital of the Ming dynasty in the same year that the Forbidden City, the seat of government, was completed.

    1492 – Christopher Columbus discovered Cuba.

    1636 – The Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony established the first college in what would become the United States, now known as Harvard University.

    1886 – President Grover Cleveland dedicated the Statue of Liberty, in New York Harbor.

    1893 – Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Pathétique, had its premiere performance in St. Petersburg, only nine days before the composer’s death.

    1929 – “Black Monday” on Wall Street, preceding the Great Depression.

    1943 – The supposed ‘Philadelphia Experiment,’ involving teleportation or invisibility by the US Navy, took place with the destroyer escort ship, the USS Eldridge. The US Navy maintains that no such experiment occurred and details of the story contradict ‘well-established facts about the Eldridge.’

    1948 – Paul Müller was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine for his discovery of the insecticidal properties of DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane).

    1950 – The Jack Benny Show Premiered on CBS.

    1962 – Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev ordered the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba, ending the “Cuban Missle Crisis.”

    1965 – Construction on the 650 foot high St. Louis Arch was completed.

    1965 – Nostra aetate, the “Declaration on the Relation of the Church with Non-Christian Religions” of the Second Vatican Council, was approved by Pope Paul VI; absolving the Jews of responsibility for the death of Jesus, reversing Innocent III’s 760-year-old declaration.

    History for October 29
    1618 – Sir Walter Raleigh was beheaded for conspiring against James I of England.

    1886 – The first ticker-tape parade took place in New York City when office workers spontaneously throw ticker tape into the streets after the Statue of Liberty was dedicated.

    1888 – The Convention of Constantinople was signed, guaranteeing maritime passage through the Suez Canal during war and peace.

    1929 – “Black Tuesday” – The New York Stock Exchange crashed.

    1966 – William Hartnell made his last appearance as the First Doctor in the concluding moments of Episode 4 of the Doctor Who serial ‘The Tenth Planet’.

    1967 – Montreal’s World Fair – Expo 67 closed, with over 50 million visitors.

    1969 – The first-ever computer-to-computer link was established on ARPANET, the precursor to the Internet.

    1971 – Rock Guitarist Duane Allman died in a motorcycle accident.

    1993- The very first “Got Milk?” commercial was broadcast. It was directed by Michael Bay.

    1998 – The Gothenburg discotheque fire in Sweden killed 63 students and injured 200 more.

    1998 – Space Shuttle Discovery took off with 77-year old John Glenn on board, making him the oldest person to go into space.

    2012 – Hurricane Sandy hit the east coast of the United States, killing 148 people directly and 138 in the aftermath.

    History for October 30
    1876 – Great Backeganj Cyclone, India (now Bangladesh)

    1945 – Jackie Robinson of the Kansas City Monarchs signed a contract for the Brooklyn Dodgers, breaking the baseball color barrier.

    1938 – Orson Welles broadcast his radio play of H. G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds.

    1947 – The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), later becoming the World Trade Organisation (WTO), was founded.

    1974 – The Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and champion George Foreman took place in Kinshasa, Zaire. Ali won by knockout, knocking Foreman down just before the end of the eighth round.

    1987 – NEC released the first 16-bit (fourth generation) video game console, the PC Engine, in Japan. It was later sold around the world under the name TurboGrafx-16.

    2002 – Warren Zevon was featured on the Late Show with David Letterman as the only guest for the entire hour, performing several songs and spoke about being diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer.
    “Enjoy every sandwich.”

    2015 – At least 56 people are killed and more than 155 injuries after a fire in the Colectiv nightclub in Bucharest, Romania.

    History for October 31
    683 – During the second Second Islamic Civil War and the Siege of Mecca, the Kaaba caught fire and burned down.

    1517 – Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany.

    1913 – Dedication of the Lincoln Highway, from Times Square in New York City to Lincoln Park in San Francisco. It was the first automobile highway going across the United States.

    1923 – The first of 160 consecutive days of 100° Fahrenheit at Marble Bar, Western Australia.

    1926 – Magician Harry Houdini died of gangrene and peritonitis that developed after his appendix ruptured (after an unexpected punch to the stomach a few days earlier).

    1941 – Mount Rushmore is completed, featuring the sculpted head of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.

    1968 – “October Surprise” – Just before the US elections, US President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that he had ordered a complete cessation of “all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam” effective November 1.

    1969 – Wal-mart incorporated in Arkansas.

    1991 – Are You Afraid of The Dark premiered on Nickelodeon

    1998 – WKOW in Madison, Wisconsin became one of the first high-definition broadcasts in digital television.

    2011 – Today is the date that there were 7 billion people living on Earth.

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  • October 1 in Pop Culture History

    October 1 in Pop Culture History

    October 1st History, Trivia, and Fun Facts

    October 1st History Highlights

    • 1932 – Babe Ruth’s ‘Called Shot” in the 5th inning of game three in the 1932 World Series
    • 1947 – Levittown, Long Island, New York opened.
    • 1961 – Roger Maris broke Babe Ruth’s Home Run Record with HR #61 in a single season.
    • Umbrella Academy (fiction) On October 1, 1989, 43 women around the world give birth simultaneously, despite none of them showing any sign of pregnancy until labor began. Seven of the children are adopted by eccentric billionaire Sir Reginald Hargreeves, and turned into a superhero team that he called “The Umbrella Academy.”
    • October 1, 1986, is Firepup’s Birthday
    • I hope someone remembered to wake up Billie Joe Armstrong today
    • If you were born on October 1st,
      You were likely conceived the week of… January 8th (same year)

    Babe Ruth’s Called Shot

    It is still debated as to what happened in the third game of the 1932 World Series. The New York Yankees played the Cubs at Chicago’s Wrigley Field and Babe Ruth hit a three-run homer in the first inning. When he came to the plate to face pitcher Charlie Root, a Cubs bench jockey called him and heckled him. During the 5th inning, Ruth pointed to the midfield bleachers and made a pointing gesture, but no existing film confirms it. The exact nature of Ruth’s gesture is unclear, and the point was later fully confirmed or refuted.

    The Yankees won the game 7-5, ending the demoralizing Cubs and completing their World Series victory. Babe Ruth’s call was the first time he and the New York Yankees had hit a home run in a 1932 World Series game, which was played at Yankee Stadium on October 4, 1932.

    Levittown, New York

    The founder’s son, William Levitt, came home from the Navy with the belief that young veterans returning to the United States would need a home. While William Levitt was in Hawaii, his father took over the management of the company and planned to build low-cost homes on Long Island, the largest island in New York. On July 1, 1947, he brokered a $50 million Levittown development that ultimately included more than 100,000 square feet of residential and commercial space.

    The development consisted of more than 17,000 single-family homes built for veterans returning from World War II. Levittown is considered one of the earliest examples of a planning community originally established on Long Island in the United States. It was a mass housing project that produced housing for veterans and other low-income residents. Construction firm Levitt & Sons, led by architects Abraham and Alfred Levittleown, Jr., built four planned, eventually seven communities.

    Levittown, New York (built 1947–1951)
    Levittown, Pennsylvania (1952–1958)
    Willingboro Township, New Jersey (originally known as Levittown, started 1958)
    Levittown, Puerto Rico (1963)
    Bowie, Maryland (1964)
    Crofton, Maryland (1970)
    Largo, Maryland (1963)

    World Vegetarian Day

    October 1st is celebrated as World Vegetarian Day. This very specific holiday was initiated by the North American Vegetarian Society in 1977 and was endorsed by the International Vegetarian Union in 1978.

    October 1st is…

    Balloons Around the World Day
    International Coffee Day
    Hair Day
    Homemade Cookies Day
    Less Than Perfect Day
    Music Day
    Raccoon Appreciation Day
    World Vegetarian Day

    October 1st Birthday Quotes

    “Wake Me Up When September Ends”
    – Billie Joe Armstrong

    “LOL has turned into something you type when you have nothing better to add into a conversation.”
    – Richard Harris

    “I’m not crazy. I play a lot of crazy characters, but I’m an actor.”
    – Randy Quaid

    “Leave every place you go, everything you touch, a little better for your having been there.”
    – Julie Andrews

    “You have to be really comfortable with yourself because people are going to tell you that you’re eyes are too brown or you’re this or you’re that. And if you’re not comfortable with yourself, you could get pretty freaked out.”
    – Brie Larson

    “There’s nothing wrong with me, I mean, I don’t like boys.”
    – Bonnie Elizabeth Parker

    “Performance-enhancing drugs are an illusion. I wish I had never gotten involved with steroids. It was wrong. It was stupid.”
    – Mark McGwire

    October 1st Birthdays

    1896 – Ted Healy, American comedic actor, 3 Stooges founder(died in 1937)
    1910 – Bonnie Parker, American criminal (died in 1934)
    1920 – Walter Matthau, American actor (died in 2000)
    1924 – Jimmy Carter, American politician, 39th President of the United States, Nobel Prize laureate
    1924 – Roger Williams, American pianist (died in 2011)
    1924 – William Rehnquist, US Supreme Court Justice (died in 2005)
    1927 – Tom Bosley, American actor (died in 2010)
    1928 – George Peppard, American actor (died in 1994)
    1930 – Richard Harris, Irish actor (died in 2002)
    1935 – Julie Andrews, English actress and singer
    1938 – Stella Stevens, American actress
    1950 – Randy Quaid, American actor
    1963 – Mark McGwire, American baseball player
    1980 – Sarah Drew, American actress
    1984 – Beck Bennett, American comedic actor
    1989 – Brie Larson, American actress

    October 1st History

    331 BC – Alexander the Great defeated Darius III of Persia in the Battle of Gaugamela, bringing about the fall of of the Persian Empire.

    1843 – London’s The News of the World began publication.

    1868 – Little Women by Louisa May Alcott was published

    1880 – John Philip Sousa, the first recorded popular music star, became the United States Marine Band leader.

    Yosemite National Park: Established on October 1, 1890, in California and spans 1,169 square miles. Known for its granite cliffs, waterfalls, giant sequoia groves, and diverse plant and animal life.

    1908 – For $825 each, Ford’s Model T car was put on the market.

    1940 – The Pennsylvania Turnpike opened to traffic. It is considered the first US superhighway.

    1948 – Over Fargo, North Dakota, WW II pilot George F. Gorman reported ‘playing chicken” with a blinking orb of light UFO. People visually saw it in the control tower but did not show up on radar.

    1950 – Tom Corbett, Space Cadet debuted on television

    October 1, 1954, 19** Birthday (fictional) Marge Simpson, The Simpsons, TV

    1955 – The Honeymooners premiered on CBS

    1957 – First appearance of “In God We Trust” on U.S. paper currency, on one-dollar bills.

    1958 – The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) became the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

    1968 – George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead was released in theaters.

    1971 – Walt Disney World opened near Orlando, Florida.

    1972 – The Joy of Sex by Dr. Alex Comfort was published, eventually selling over 12 million copies.

    1977 – #1 Hit October 1, 1977 – October 14, 1977: Meco – Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band

    1983 – #1 Hit October 1, 1983 – October 28, 1983: Bonnie Tyler – Total Eclipse of the Heart

    1984 – The term “cyberspace” was coined in William Gibson’s novel Neuromancer.

    1989 – Denmark introduced the world’s first legal modern same-sex civil union, called a “registered partnership”.

    1992 – Cartoon Network begins broadcasting. The first cartoon, outside of Droopy Dog’s introduction, was Bugs Bunny in Rhapsody Rabbit.

    1992- Cartoon Network was initiated.

    1996 – Animal Planet made its debut

    1999 – The famous “You Fool” episode of Hollywood Squares aired.

    2006 – Dexter premiered on Showtime

    2010 – Sony launched Sony Movie Channel

    2013 – The United States federal government shutdown of 2013 (October 1-16) affected many operations for the US government

    There are 91 days left this year.

    Today’s Random Trivia and Shower Thoughts

    Birds are dinosaurs- they are considered “avian dinosaurs” and have been around for 100 million years, thus making them among the last living dinosaurs on Earth.

    Tom Hanks is the first actor to play Walt Disney in a mainstream feature film. (Saving Mr. Banks)

    Every movie John Cazale was in was nominated for a Best Picture Oscar (all three Godfathers, The Conversation, The Deer Hunter and Dog Day Afternoon).

    The Capital of Laos is Vientiane

    On the day of his death, “Heath Ledger” was understandably the number 1 search on Google. Number 2 was “Keith Ledger”.

    The biggest film of 1927: The Jazz Singer earned ~ $3,000,000

    A group of Chinchillas is called a Colony.

    “Sawyer, you’re going out a youngster, but you’ve got to come back a star!” – Julian Marsh (Warner Baxter) in 42nd Street, 1933

    Female gladiators (gladiatrices) existed during the Roman Empire.

    A “white elephant gift exchange” takes its name from the legend of the King of Siam gifting rare albino elephants to those who displeased him because the upkeep costs would financially ruin them.

    “No matter how knowledgeable you are, respect your parents for their experience and your children for their curiosity.” – Amit Kalantri

    Roulette Odds: any one number: Payoff: 35:1 True Odds: 2.63%

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