Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for January 27, 2019

  1. Mainavatar
    Leroy  almost 6 years ago

    Let me guess—WebMD??

     •  Reply
  2. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  almost 6 years ago

    how does one test the blood pressure of a spider?

     •  Reply
  3. Hold still i gotcha homie 28918 1250050600 0
    Aussie Down Under  almost 6 years ago

    As for Einstein’s brain I believe that should be was not is.

     •  Reply
  4. Cropped narragansett indian logo
    The Pro from Dover  almost 6 years ago
    what happened after 1930 to make the colors change between boys and girls?
     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    funny_jack  almost 6 years ago

    I’m not sure I would ever want to know that data about my brain. After all, think about how THAT was measured.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    funny_jack  almost 6 years ago

    I was thinking the same thing.

     •  Reply
  7. Hacking dog original
    J Short  almost 6 years ago

    Some spiders were found using the store BP monitor at Walmart.

     •  Reply
  8. Huckandfish
    Huckleberry Hiroshima  almost 6 years ago

    So much all the time about Einstein. What about Finklestein? Oiving Finklestein, New Jersey laundry truck driver extraordinaire.

     •  Reply
  9. Img e0281
    joefearsnothing  almost 6 years ago

    Did they perform an autopsy on Einstein in order to calculate his cerebral dimensions?

     •  Reply
  10. S l640
    joeatwork212  almost 6 years ago

    Isn’t it interesting that as drug companies become more powerful, “healthy” blood pressure numbers get lower and lower?

     •  Reply
  11. Birthday 001
    squiggle9  almost 6 years ago

    didn’t know they had blood

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    news_techren  almost 6 years ago

    With a spiderhygommanometer, of course.

     •  Reply
  13. It  s a gas station    by todd sullest
    Max Starman Jones  almost 6 years ago

    And some time between 1988 and 2000, they changed the Republican and Democrat colors. In Reagan’s landslide of 1984, the whole map was blue.

    I never figured out why they switched the colors on them.

     •  Reply
  14. Img 1610
    WCraft Premium Member almost 6 years ago

    Well, I know that in the 50s it was common for men to own pink cars (think Elvis) and wear pink shirts. Not sure how it got turned around. Probably not politically correct today, anyway.

     •  Reply
  15. Rhadamanthus
    craigwestlake  almost 6 years ago

    I want to see how they get that tiny cuff on one of those legs…

     •  Reply
  16. Ssn702
    austeve79  almost 6 years ago

    Einstein’s Brain…..IS….? Should that be WAS???

     •  Reply
  17. Spock
    Spock  almost 6 years ago

    The significance of brain size is overestimated. For a long time, birds were considered less intelligent as they really are, because scientists thought their brain would be to small. Today it is known that crows are about as intellgent as apes, although their brain is much smaller. The brain’s visual part size of Einstein being 15% wider would not explain the big difference of reasoning capability between Einstein and an average human (I mean, 15% – go away!). And don’t forget: Average brain weight of males is 10% higher than brain weight of females.

     •  Reply
  18. Spock
    Spock  almost 6 years ago

    Background story: When Einstein died in Princeton Hospital in 1955, the pathologist Thomas Harvey stole his brain. It was later carved into 240 pieces, preserved in celloidin, and kept in two jars. Even later, Harvey kept the brain in a cider box stashed under a beer cooler. He studied the brain in his spare time. In 1985, Harvey published the first study of Einstein’s brain, claiming that it had an abnormal proportion of two types of cells. This could not be proven later. When Harvey lost his medical license in 1988, he started cutting off chunks to send to researchers around the world. Five studies from other researchers followed. The results of the studies were doubted by many experts, for several reasons (e.g. the state of Einstein’s brain, the small control group of 11 (!) haphazardly chosen brains etc.) BTW, Harvey’s claim was not that Einstein’s brain was partly “wider”, but more densely packed. When reading the story about Einstein’s brain and the “studies”, you might highly doubt that they proof anything except for that Einstein had a human brain, which was more or less the same as any other average brain.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Ripley's Believe It or Not