Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for April 26, 2015
Transcript:
No more tears and no more mints! Bedfordshire growers' Alastair Findlay invented a red onion that promises to be tear and bad breath free! McMummified! Australians Casey Dean and Eduard Nitz kept a McDonald's quarter pounder with cheese and its original wrapper for 20 years! But can he catch? Major League Baseball's Warren Spahn had 363 wins as a pitcher and 363 hits as a batter!
hawgowar almost 10 years ago
But does the red onion taste like a red onion should?
Templo S.U.D. almost 10 years ago
Why, Misters Nitz and Dean, did you not eat it?
charliefarmrhere almost 10 years ago
And after 20 years still tastes better than the new mystery meat ones.
Cloudchaser almost 10 years ago
Even an all organic burger of the same size would last 20 years in the same wrapper. It’s not in an airtight container and so it dries too soon for mold, etc. to get going
upanddown17 almost 10 years ago
20 years? GROSS!!!
blackash2004-tree Premium Member almost 10 years ago
Oklahoma, the chosen home and final resting place of Warren Spahn. Other HOF players and great players associated with the state are Carl Hubbell, Mantle, the Waner boys, Stargell, Bench, Pepper Martin, Bobbie Cox, Alvin Dark, Lindy McDaniel, Bill Russell, Jim Brewer, Frank Linzy, Joe Carter, and Allie Reynolds.
rhsasl almost 10 years ago
Warren Spahn, gr8 baseball player
Chris Overman almost 10 years ago
The onions are grown close by me, they have a milder flavour than other verities of Red Onions, which in turn are milder than white Onions
Fan o’ Lio. almost 10 years ago
The mantra of the old Boston Braves:Spahn and Sain and pray for rain.
Fan o’ Lio. almost 10 years ago
John Franklin Sain was an American right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who was best known for teaming with left-hander Warren Spahn on the Boston Braves teams from 1946 to 1951.
zeimetr almost 10 years ago
Warren Spahn of the high kick pitch. One of my child hood heroes growing up in Milwaukee. Others were Eddie Matthews, Henry Aaron, Lew Burdette.