💡 This is June’s edition of “Things I Learned”.
Things I Learned
- Denver Airport sees more passengers a year than JFK Airport (source).
- The first commercial item ever to be scanned by barcode was a pack of juicy fruit gum. (source)
- The Kalenjin tribes of Kenya are roughly 0.08% of the world’s population, but account for more than 40% of all World Championship and Olympic medals in running distances >800M. (source, h/t).
- The record of peasant revolts from 1500-1910 is 1 win, 6 draws, 71 losses (source, h/t)
- The New York Mets have never produced an MVP. (source)
- Approximately 61% of U.S. boat owners have an annual household income of $75,000 or less (source)
- Dr. Pepper is older than Coca Cola or Pepsi (source).
- The National Bank Act of 1864 required banks to include the word “national” in their names and encouraged them to bear numbers, hence the similarity in a lot of bank names today. (source, h/t)
- Dwile flonking is a British pub game (source).
- In 1970, the average woman had 4.83 kids (source).
- Honolulu’s TheBus is the nation's most heavily used public transportation system per capita among major cities. (source)
- Nowhere in the New Testament does it specify the number of wise men who visited Jesus. (source)
- Of the 7 largest publicly traded companies in the world — Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Google, Amazon, Saudi Aramco, and Meta — only Saudi Aramco was founded in San Francisco (source, h/t)
- The CEO of Delta took his first flight at age 25 (source)
- The national sport of Afghanistan, Buzkashi, involves players riding around on horseback in an effort to put a goat carcass in a goal. (source)
- Algorithms were invented in 825 AD by Muhammad Algorithm (source, h/t).1
- The reason that hedge funds charge 20% of profits is because the founder of the first hedge fund, Alfred Winslow Jones, noted that Phoenician sea captains kept a fifth of the profits from successful voyages” (source)