The NCAA has a 14-year, nearly 11 billion dollar agreement, established in 2010, with CBS and Turner Sports for the TV rights to the annual 68-team NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

In August 2003, the United States Postal Service sent the band “The Postal Service” a cease and desist letter, citing its trademark on the phrase “postal service”. After negotiations, the USPS relented, allowing the band use of the trademark in exchange for promotional efforts on behalf of the USPS and a performance at its annual National Executive Conference.

“L’esprit de l’escalier” is a French term which in English describes the predicament of thinking of the perfect comeback too late.

The entire GoldenEye 007 game on N64 is only 12 MB.

A group of flamingos can be called a “flamboyance”.

When Niels Bohr won the Nobel Prize in 1922 for his contributions towards uncovering atomic structure, Carlsberg brewery gave him a free house, right next to the brewery, with a direct tap to unlimited beer.

King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand has reigned since June 9, 1946, making him the world’s longest reigning current monarch and the world’s longest serving head of state. He is currently 85 years old.

He is also the wealthiest monarch in the world and owns a ton of land. Including 3,493 acres in Bangkok!

On December 21, 1935, Mayor La Guardia proclaimed a ban on the sale or possession of baby artichokes anywhere in New York City. It lasted three days.

Ciro Terranova, a member of the New York mafia, cornered the artichoke market by buying all the crates coming in from California and reselling them at a 30 to 40 percent profit. Known as the “Artichoke King”, Terranova sustained this profitable monopoly through intimidation of distributors, merchants and even growers. The artichoke monopoly was swiftly defeated, and the ban lifted on its third day when the five companies which imported the commodity from California signed an agreement at City Hall →

Volvo invented the three-point seat belt in 1959 and left the design patent available to other car manufacturers for free in the interest of safety.

The largest loss of life at sea in US Navy history occurred on July 30, 1945 when the Japanese sunk the USS Indianapolis (CA-35) leaving about 900 men in the open ocean for 4 days. Over 500 men were consumed by sharks before a rescue team arrived, leaving only 317 survivors.

This ship was later referenced in the 1975 movie Jaws, when Captain Samuel Quint is depicted as a survivor of the USS Indianapolis.