Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for August 15, 2019

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    Templo S.U.D.  about 5 years ago

    The Bonaparte bunny hollaballoo: is that what inspired the killer rabbit from the Monty Python movie about King Arthur searching for the Holy Grail?

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    wjones  about 5 years ago

    At least I learned what the DC on DC comics means and what they might have been worth if I had saves mine.

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    pearlsbs  about 5 years ago

    Bony on the Isle of St. Helena

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5735ykB3x3s

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    Tog  about 5 years ago

    Well done to those rabbits.

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    bluegirl285  about 5 years ago

    Next time you want a bunny hunt Napoleon, let’s not get them from Monty Python, ok?

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    Breadboard  about 5 years ago

    Use the Holy Hand Grenade !

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    fuzzbucket Premium Member about 5 years ago

    Attacked right into the stewpot.

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    Bilan  about 5 years ago

    A fruit is anything that can have seeds. It doesn’t matter if it’s one, many or even seedless + berries are always fruits.

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    redlandz  about 5 years ago

    Clearly, these were English Hares… known to be aggressive…

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    Crowmeus  about 5 years ago

    Only the company is now called DC Comics, the series is still Detective Comics, and Batman has been the Star, mostly, since his first appearance.

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    James Wolfenstein  about 5 years ago

    The orange is not a berry and it’s not single-seeded… is it meat?

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    FassEddie  about 5 years ago

    Somebody needs to CGI that scene. 3000 attacking bunnies.

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    Carl Rennhack Premium Member about 5 years ago

    The Little Corporal learned the hard way what I learned from Dean Martin many years ago…“You’re nobody ’til some BUNNY loves you”!

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    Carl Rennhack Premium Member about 5 years ago

    BTW, two of the rabbit’s descendants appear in today’s (08/15) “Rose Is Rose”!

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    NeedaChuckle Premium Member about 5 years ago

    I had the first Fantastic Four Issue, my mother threw all my comics away when I was in the service. I would tell her the worth of first issues from time to time.

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    Huckleberry Hiroshima  about 5 years ago

    Led by Crusader Rabbit, no doubt.

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    Crandlemire  about 5 years ago

    What makes a fruit a fruit — Botanically speaking, a fruit is a seed-bearing structure that develops from the ovary of a flowering plant, whereas vegetables are all other plant parts, such as roots, leaves and stems.So it doesn’t matter that an avocado is a single seeded berry.

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    comixbomix  about 5 years ago

    I was surprised to learn on Jeopardy the other night that bananas are considered to be berries because of their “seeds”.

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    jvn  about 5 years ago

    Napoleon, just look at the BONES!

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    Nick Danger  about 5 years ago

    “These ain’t no ordinary rabbits!”

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    stamps  about 5 years ago

    Bunnies attacked President Carter once, didn’t they? Dangerous critters!

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    57BelAir  about 5 years ago

    I think it should read “a copy of issue #27” since there wasn’t just 1.

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    Aliquid  about 5 years ago

    Avocados are far more fascinating than just that.

    Avocado trees used to reproduce and spread by animals eating their fruit and pooping out the seeds (as with most plants). The thing is… there hasn’t been an animal that can eat a full avocado since the days of the Woolly Mammoth. Back then the Giant Ground Sloth would eat an avocado whole, and pass the seed on. When the Giant Sloth went extinct, the avocado should have gone extinct along with it.

    The only thing they can figure is that some ancient pre-Aztec civilization managed to cultivate it and keep it living.

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    El Cobbo Grande  about 5 years ago

    We’re the bunnies armed…..I hope they were

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    yangeldf  about 5 years ago

    HA! Napoleon unleashed the night of the lepus!

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    namelocdet  about 5 years ago

    I wonder if that is where the sarcastic phrase…“Getting kicked to death by a rabbit”, originated.

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    Gent  about 5 years ago

    Detective Comics, eh? Did they ever feature any detective comics? Why didn’t they call it Superhero Comics?

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    Gent  about 5 years ago

    How’dya like that. I gotta steal food to fill my poor hungry tummy and some people buy comics for 1,075,500 US Dollars.

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    Gent  about 5 years ago

    Did he call his very own bunny rabbits as George?

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    desvarzil  about 5 years ago

    So that’s where Monty Python got the idea for the rabbit scene in “Monty Python and The Holy Grail”! “Death awaits you with pointy teeth!!”

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    celtickat53  about 5 years ago

    Smart rabbits!

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    oakie817  about 5 years ago

    attack of the killer bunnies…attack of the killer bunnies…(sung to the tune of ‘attack of the killer tomatoes’)

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    SusanSunshine Premium Member about 5 years ago

    Aaagh… there are TWO definitions here for fruit…..

    Botanical and culinary.

    People talking about plant life stages use the botanical definition…

    which is what Ripley’s is seizing on here to make a bogus point.

    In daily life, we use the looser, culinary definition.

     

    Plants have two phases, active growth, called vegetating… when new leaves, flowers and roots are forming

    And fruiting, when growth stops, and the plant gets ready to reproduce.

    On many, the stages can coexist in different parts of the plant.

     

    Any growing, or vegetating, part of the plant is called a vegetable…

    Leaves, roots, stems, etc…. lettuce, celery, carrots.

    Usually you have to cut it off…. it doesn’t “ripen” and fall off.

    (That’s why it’s backwards when we call someone paralyzed a “vegetable.”)

     

    When a plant, or part of it, rests after growth, its ovaries swell….

    Most develop seeds that can make new plants… though we eat many of them immature, like green beans.

    So…. anything developed from an ovary is the product of the fruiting stage, & BOTANICALLY, a fruit or a seed.

    Fruits may be, botanically, berries, drupes, pomes, or other categories we seldom mention.

     

    In CULINARY terms, we group things by taste and usage, not their botanical category.

    If botanical fruits are not sweet, & we use them in savory preparations…

    They are called VEGETABLES.

    Many “berries” ate not botanically berries; and we use many botanical berries as vegetables. No need to make a big fuss over 1 or 2 in particular.

    Avocados are difficult because some cultures treat them like fruit, but in the US they’re vegetables.

     

    The specious argument that tomatoes are fruit was all about a fruit tax a customs agent tried to levy on some in the 1860s….

    It was decided back THEN, in court, that TOMATOES were culinary VEGETABLES…

    But we didn’t have the internet, so the silly myth persists.

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    tinstar  about 5 years ago

    Actually, Napoleon loved to hunt, so, one of his subordinates went about setting up a rabbit hunt. However, in order to make sure his boss was successful, the subordinate went around the country side, and had a couple thousand domesticated bunnies held in cages, and released, when Napoleon arrived for the hunt.

    Because the bunnies had not been fed in a couple of days, they immediately turned to the first person they saw, expecting to get fed…. Good old “Nappy!” Suffice to say, the hunt was a total disaster, and the subordinate who arranged it, probably avoided being executed, by a “hare.” :)

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    WDD  about 5 years ago

    “Pow!” “Wham!” I am SO sick of that ignorant 1960s “camp” Batman stuff! You’d think that after 50 years and a slew of serious detective thrillers about Batman in the movies that reporters would have moved beyond that! Plus, Bob Kane’s and Bill Finger’s 1939 publication of Batman had none of that silly stuff.

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