Who invented funny




















At least in Dutch the name makes sense. Paraplu - derived from the French 'para pluie' which means 'against rain'. Which is exactly what an umbrella is used for. TheWeirdWorld Report. ChicksRule Report. TheAndrewNadeau Report. Thomas Midgley Jr.

It would be interesting if you could quantify his impact on our world. KalvinMacleod Report. HammerFist3 Report. Ggreen Report. Its called I wish this really tough meat was edible, lets boil it to death and try to make it palatable by adding potatoes and other veg. KeetPotato Report. Tea is a leaf. Not grass.

And supposedly it was the Chinese emperor Shen Nong or by alternate accounts, one of his bodyguards. Shen Nong was a noted herbalist and alchemist already, and one day as he was preparing hot water, a leaf from a camellia tree fell into the water. Observing the color change and the pleasant smell, the emperor tasted the resulting infusion and was greatly pleased. KylePlantEmoji Report. Hmm the tree just isn't enough. What else do we have?

Yup throw that on, what else? Pine cones? Note: this post originally had 46 images. Anyone can write on Bored Panda. Start writing! Follow Bored Panda on Google News! Follow us on Flipboard. Your image is too large, maximum file size is 8 MB. Not your original work? Add source. Error occurred when generating embed. Please check link and try again. Lili ended up in Vilnius, Lithuania out of her curiosity for studying languages, and stayed here out of sheer willpower.

She loves cats maybe even a little more than the internet average and enjoys cooking videos despite only fantasizing about being able to make anything more complicated than fried rice. Photo editor at Bored Panda. Mindaugas has worked as a freelance photographer mainly doing events, product photography and has a recurring passion for macro photography.

And there are people that actually pay for that shit. Back in the eighteenth century when Sumatra and Java were part of the Dutch colonial empire in the East Indies, Arabica coffee was introduced as a cash crop, using plants brought in from the Arabian Peninsula. The Dutch plantation owners forbid the indigenous workers from sampling the fruits of their labor. The locals then cleaned and roasted the beans, and began to brew their own coffee from them.

Lol I never knew why but always wondered too- I thought the same foxxy Lol, that someone was really hard up for a caffeine hit one day XD. So in , Templeton put his idea up to a vote.

It lost -- despite receiving only one "no" vote, it got just 60 "yes" votes, far short of the necessary Brad Templeton One of the problems might have been that Templeton was requesting a moderated site -- in order to limit the flames and the bad jokes and so on. On August 7, , he started it anyway. Voting was the preferred process, but just about any geek could physically post a group.

So he did. By the next month, it was in seventh place, two ahead of longtime favorite rec. By August of , it was No. Here are the latest Insider stories. You could only talk for 30 to 60 minutes until it was time to recharge, which could take 10 hours unless you wanted to pay extra for a fast charger.

You did get enough memory to store 30 contacts and a cool LED display showing red numbers, so maybe it was all worth it. But here's the big question. Only time will tell. Beer not only makes things more humorous to those consuming it, but its creation is also comical -- even thousands of years ago, people still added an extra punch to their feasts and gatherings with intoxicating beverages. As archaeologists continue to piece together where and how the first brew was crafted, one thing's for sure: this intoxicating beverage changed the way people lived and had fun.

Physical evidence of fermented beverages dates as far back as 9, years ago, experts say, with beer entering the scene at least 5, years ago [sources: McGovern et al. But beer isn't the first thing to come to mind when you want to tie modern societies to ancient civilizations. Even so, the beverage likely played a role in determining which crops to harvest, and potentially, where large groups of people chose to settle. Intoxication may have fostered cultural activities, including artistic expression, medicine and spiritual rituals [source: Tucker ].

Fast-forward to today, the beer industry still takes pride in its humor and ability to jump-start a good time -- you'd be hard-pressed to watch an average beer commercial without a laugh. Need something to eat with your beverage? We'll get you some frozen turkey, peas and potatoes next. Brewing beer provided sanitation perks in Middle-Age Europe and later for the American colonies.

It turns out the process of fermenting the beverage can kill harmful bacteria in water supplies. In some cases, beer was not only a preferred choice -- it was safer to drink, too. The idea of the television affecting humans' diets may seem silly, but take the case of the TV dinner.

The popularity of the TV during the midth century carried into dinnertime for the average American family. To make tube-viewing more convenient during mealtime, companies created ways to prepackage foods for easy consumption. TV dinner meals popped up in a variety of forms -- some more humorous and palatable than others Is that meat or potato in that compartment? Inspired by packaged airplane meals, the TV dinner hit markets in the late s. Meals would be processed at factories and purchased at the grocer to store in the freezer at home.

They could be heated up by oven or later, microwave at the person's convenience. It's contested who invented the dinner TV, but when the company Swanson started marketing its frozen meals in the mids, the foods' popularity sky-rocketed [source: The Library of Congress ].

Regardless of inventor see " History of TV Dinners " for more details , frozen meals have changed how humans think about and consume food. TV dinners and today's frozen meals save people time as well as lengthen how long people can store food. During the meals' growth, however, some argued it made TV -- not socializing with family -- the focus of mealtime. Our next invention brings the funniest and shocking aspects of "real life" into your living room.

With reality TV , you never know what ridiculous scene you'll stumble upon by changing the channel. Some shows place the spotlight on people's raw interactions with each other, while others seem so far-fetched that the thought of labeling them as "reality" is laugh-inducing. As one expert puts it, reality TV incites a type of voyeurism for those watching -- much like peering into your neighbor's kitchen or bedroom window without them knowing [source: Slocum ].

Public Broadcasting Service's series "An American Family" popularized applying documentary tactics for mass appeal. Still, we've come a long way from those early reality experiments. These low-cost projects have now become what many viewers have come to expect from large networks.

Could we peruse our own home videos without browsing for moments worthy of "America's Funniest Home Videos" to laugh at? The answers probably vary, but ratings and network offerings show that reality TV remains the most popular genre as of [source: Carter ].

Even if you're not a regular reality junkie, who doesn't find some auditions on "American Idol" the tiniest bit funny? After all, the most outrageous attempts for fame may resemble our own musical moments in front of the mirror or in the shower. Underwear can make even the most serious of us giggle. Because these garments cover the private parts of a person's body. Let's just say what people don under their clothes can be the most revealing fashion statement.

Bras in particular hold a greater significance. Though women sported bra-like garments in ancient times, they didn't really pick up until the debut of Mary Phelps Jacob's "backless brassiere" in the early s [source: MIT ]. Her version of this undergarment redefined how women showcased or contained their breasts, depending on trends and time period.

Phelps Jacob eventually sold her invention's patent to the Warner Brothers Corset Company, where the bra surpassed the corset in popularity, partially because corsets used valuable metal that needed to be used toward World War I. The bra obtained its characteristic cups later on -- Phelps Jacob's original invention intended to flatten the chest, not lift it up.

As women wore a greater diversity of bras, the device became linked to sex appeal, social class and style. Yet from the perspective of the growing U. This is why groups planned to burn the undergarments outside the Miss American pageant. Such "bra-burning" came to typify the feminist movement, even though police didn't allow the protesters to actually set them on fire [source: Duron ].

When electric lighting arrived on the scene in Victorian Britain, the technology wasn't embraced by everyone. Women in particular were concerned electric lamps would cast a harsh light on their complexions, rendering them less attractive.

Where would we be without cartoons? Would we look at pictures poking fun at political leaders the same way? Would the idea of slipping on a banana still be funny? Throughout history, illustrations have communicated ideas with wit. For instance, political cartoons printed in early periodicals satirized people and issues, providing both a good laugh and food for thought.



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