
Celebrity Birthdays, On This Day and Trivia – June 6th
2018 – Xi’an, China, introduced a pedestrian lane for people who walk while looking at their phones.
View todays celebrity birthdays and find out what happened in history today.
1915 – Sir Stanley Matthews, often regarded as one of the greatest English football players, was born. He is the only player to have been knighted while still playing, as well as being the first winner of both the European Footballer of the Year and the Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year awards. He kept fit enough to play at the top level until he was 50 years old, was also the oldest player ever to play in England’s top football division and the oldest player ever to represent his country. He played his final competitive game in 1985, at the age of 70.
1930 – The first ever ‘Times’ crossword was published.
1939 – A British White Paper proposing the formation of the Home Guard (which became better known as Dad’s Army because of the average age of the volunteers) was published. The hugely popular TV series of Dad’s Army was first aired on 31st July 1968 and ran for 9 series until 13th November 1977. The 2016 Dad’s Army film had its premiere on 26th January 2016. Principal filming took place on the beach at North Landing (Flamborough Head) and at nearby Bridlington.
1952 – The first TV detector van was demonstrated. It enabled the BBC to track down users of unlicensed television sets in Britain.
1965 – P.J. Proby, the US rock singer, was banned by ABC Theatres and the BBC after he had deliberately split his trousers during his act. The mainly female audience and the tabloids, who claimed Proby’s act was obscene, went wild. It was the beginning of the end for the flamboyant performer. (Note – We went to a concert that year, but Proby had been banned and was replaced with a then unknown singer called Tom Jones!)
1965 – Prescriptions on the NHS became free of charge and remained so until June 1968.
1974 – Escaped Great Train Robber Ronald Biggs was arrested by Brazilian police in Rio. He escaped extradition because he was the father of a child by his Brazilian girlfriend.
1979 – Trevor Francis, aged 24, became the first £1m footballer in England, signing for Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest.
1984 – Chancellor, Nigel Lawson, announced that the halfpenny coin would cease to be legal tender. Its fate was sealed when it became more expensive to make than its face value.
2005 – Arsenal’s English Premier League record 33-game unbeaten streak at home ends when the Gunners go down, 4-2 to Manchester United at Highbury.
2008 – NASA announce that Across The Universe by The Beatles will be the first song beamed directly into space.
2013 – Det. Ch. Insp. April Casburn, aged 53, became the first person to be prosecuted and jailed (15 months) as part of the investigation into payments by News of the World journalists to officials.
2017 – British MPs vote in favour of the European Union Bill, allowing the government to begin Brexit.
In a few billion years Narwhals could evolve into Unicorns.
“A day without sunshine is like, you know, night.” – Steve Martin
A really well-known trivia fact is not very good trivia.
Charles Gemora was a makeup artist and costume designer who played a gorilla in 40 films in the 1930s and 40s, including 1932, Island of Lost Souls.
Eric Clapton – Real Name: Eric Clapp
We should all strive to be the type of person you would want to serve at a restaurant.
Not Googling to check your facts before you post on the Internet is the online version of not thinking before you speak.
Being famous on Twitter is like being rich in Monopoly.
In the movie Armageddon, it probably would have been easier to train astronauts to be drillers, rather than drillers to be astronauts.
“Gentlemen, you can’t fight in here! This is the War Room!” – President Merkin Muffley (Peter Sellers) in Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, 1964
Biggest film of 1995: Toy Story (Action/Adventure) earned ~ $192,000,000
If there were people who could read minds, they would hear an awful lot of songs, sung with incorrect words, and likely very out of tune or rhythm.
“I’m just a lucky slob from Ohio who happened to be in the right place at the right time.” – Clark Gable
“I’ll retire when the Good Lord calls me.” – Ben Weider
“The Romans did not see (the tale of Romulus, Remus, and the she-wolf) as a charming story; they meant to show that they had imbibed wolfish appetites and ferocity with their mother’s milk.” – Terry Jones
“Dissidents should be paid 13 months’ salary for a year, otherwise our mindless unanimity will bring us to an even more hopeless state of stagnation. It is especially important to encourage unorthodox thinking when the situation is critical: At such moments every new word and fresh thought is more precious than gold. Indeed, people must not be deprived of the right to think their own thoughts.” – Boris Yeltsin
“Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn.” – Clark Gable
“I can’t hang out as loose as I used to, but I can still go down Jefferson Avenue and look in the faces of winos, pimps and junkies, all the things I’m made of.” – Rick James
“Some people are passionate about aisles, others about window seats.” – Terry Jones
2018 – Xi’an, China, introduced a pedestrian lane for people who walk while looking at their phones.
1993 – The Holbeck Hall Hotel in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, fell into the sea following a landslide, making news around the world.
1805 – The first Trooping of the Colour took place on Horse Guards Parade. It was Edward VII who moved Trooping the Colour to its June date, because of the vagaries of British weather.