Im like a bird, I wanna fly away.
In a galaxy far far away
Thats Hilarious
Past, Present, and Future
Accidental Inventions
100

These colorful birds can mimic human speech and are popular as pets; one common type is the African grey.


Parrots

100

This natural satellite has phases named new, crescent, quarter, gibbous, and full.


Moon

100

This 1999 comedy film features a group of friends’ misadventures on a bachelor party trip in Las Vegas.

The hangover

100

This global platform, launched in 2005, allows users to upload, watch, and share videos and has become a major source of entertainment and education.

Youtube

100

This sweet treat was invented in 1869 by a German candy maker who accidentally combined cocoa and dairy, creating a creamy new confection.

Milk Chocolate

200

In Greek mythology, this bird is said to rise from its own ashes, symbolizing rebirth and immortality.

The phoenix
200

This first artificial satellite, launched by the Soviet Union in 1957, marked the beginning of the space age.


Answer: What is Sputnik 1?

200

This actor and comedian is known for his versatile characters and sketches on Mad TV with his partner in crime, Jordan Peele


Keegan Michael Key

200

This 15th-century invention by Johannes Gutenberg revolutionized communication by making books easier and cheaper to produce.

Printing Press

200

Inventor Thomas Adams was trying to create a substitute for rubber from tree sap. After many failures, he popped a piece in his mouth and discovered an intriguing taste and sticky consticency, leading to the creation of this

Chewing Gum
300

This bird, the fastest in the world in a dive, can reach speeds over 200 miles per hour when hunting.

Peregrine Falcon

300

The first American to orbit Earth, he completed three orbits aboard Friendship 7 in 1962.


John Glenn

300

This comedian and actor started on SNL in 1990, become a superstar, later acting in a movie where he said that "Tommy wants wingy"

Chris Farley

300

This emerging technology aims to create human-like intelligence in machines, potentially transforming industries from healthcare to transportation in the coming decades.


AI

300

In 1945, Percy Spencer discovered this convenient appliance when a chocolate bar melted in his pocket while working on radar technology.

Microwave

400

In mythology and folklore, this bird often represents trickery, intelligence, and sometimes a bad omen, appearing in stories across multiple cultures.

Crow or Raven
400

This probe, launched in 1990 and still operational decades later, has captured deep-field images of galaxies billions of light-years away.

The hubble space telescope

400

This comedian is known for his clean, family-friendly observational humor and starred in the sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond.

Ray Romano

400

This 19th-century development in communication allowed near-instantaneous transmission of messages across continents, transforming business, journalism, and diplomacy worldwide.

Telagraph

400
Kutol Products initially created this substance to be a wallpaper cleaner, but it was later reformulated and marketed as a modeling compound when the cleaning industry started using it less and parents found it a useful children's toy. 




Play Doh

500
Buying a bird from PetSmart can be tough, and one of the biggest issues can be telling the birds gender. However, a parakeet's gender can be known thanks to the color of their what.

Nose

500

This region beyond Neptune contains many icy bodies and dwarf planets, including Pluto.

Kuiper Belt

500

This 1974 satirical comedy, directed by Mel Brooks, parodies the Western genre and features a bumbling gunslinger, a cowardly outlaw, and absurd slapstick humor throughout the Old West.

Blazing Saddles

500

This ambitious project aims to create a fully operational living area that integrates AI, IoT, renewable energy, and autonomous transport to optimize urban living and sustainability.

Smart Cities

500

 Invented by accident in 1928 by Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming, who noticed that a mold had contaminated a petri dish and killed the bacteria around it. While Fleming published his findings, the discovery of its therapeutic value and its mass production were later achieved by a team at Oxford University, led by Howard Florey and Ernst Chain, beginning in 1939.  

Penicillin 

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