Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for May 05, 2024

  1. Unnamed
    The dude from FL  Premium Member 8 months ago

    When I lived in AZ, Cinco de Mayo was a big thing, haven’t noticed it in FL

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    eric_harris_76  8 months ago

    That was after he ordered the theft of just about all the gold and silver in the country, right?

     •  Reply
  3. Avatar92
    Charlie Fogwhistle  8 months ago

    I don’t think I believe that 27 pounds of yarn is enough to crochet a life size gorilla.I do believe Cinco de Mayo is only popular in the USA because of the Margaritas.

     •  Reply
  4. Fb img 1444236693284
    OldsVistaCruiser  8 months ago

    Which President Roosevelt?

     •  Reply
  5. Img 1861
    Zykoic  8 months ago

    That’s quite a yarn about that gorilla.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    DATo  8 months ago

    Maybe so, but F.D.R. was better looking.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    therese_callahan2002  8 months ago

    The band Firefall took their name from an event at which someone shouted, “Let the fire fall!”

     •  Reply
  8. 7a3d35b05103496eecec311170ba260d
    Pickled Pete  8 months ago

    Blame it on the waterfall et al.

    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

    A Kung Fu student asks his teacher, “Master, why does my ability not improve? I’m always defeated.”

    And the master, pensive and forever patient, answers… “My dear pupil, have you seen the gulls flying by the setting sun and their wings seeming like flames?”

    “Yes, my master, I have.”

    “And a waterfall, spilling mightily over the stones without taking anything out of its proper place?”

    “Yes, my master, I have witnessed it.”

    “And the moon, when it touches the calm water to reflect all its enormous beauty?”

    “Yes, my master, I have also seen this marvelous phenomenon.”

    “That is the problem. You keep watching all this shìt instead of training.”

     •  Reply
  9. Photo
    PB1  8 months ago

    B.I.O.N.!. What does that mean?

     •  Reply
  10. 0804242
    James Wolfenstein  8 months ago

    Cinco de Mayo got popular through TV shows in the USA… and it became an opportunity to party and drink! With the right script, we can make October 25 the next “drink-vodka-till-you-puke” US most popular celebration!! :D

     •  Reply
  11. Billbeauw scare
    billbeauw1971  8 months ago

    I really enjoyed the TV show. They should bring it back.

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    cmerb  8 months ago

    Years ago my friend Bob and I with our girl friends would go to a Mexican restaurant on the lower East side of Detroit by the Bell Island bridge and they would drink their fill of Margaritas , not me though because I only drink beer but it was fun : )

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    jss49 Premium Member 8 months ago

    For those who don’t already know, TCM is running the 1930s “Believe It Or Not” theatrical shorts Saturday morning at approx. 8:10am eastern, hosted by Robert Ripley himself.

     •  Reply
  14. Fdr avatar 6d9910b68a3c 128
    Teto85 Premium Member 8 months ago

    The Yosemite Firefall was a summertime event that began in 1872 and continued for almost a century, in which burning hot embers were spilled from the top of Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park to the valley 3,000 feet (900 m) below. From a distance it appeared as a glowing waterfall. The owners of the Glacier Point Hotel conducted the firefall. History has it that David Curry, founder of Camp Curry, would stand at the base of the fall, and yell “Let the fire fall,” each night as a signal to start pushing the embers. The firefalls were performed at 9 p.m. seven nights a week as the final act of a performance at Camp Curry.The Firefall ended in January 1968, when George B. Hartzog, then the director of the National Park Service, ordered it to stop because the overwhelming number of visitors that it attracted trampled the meadows, and because it was not a natural event. The NPS wanted to preserve the valley, returning it to its natural state. The Glacier Point Hotel was destroyed by fire 18 months later and was not rebuilt.The spectacle of the Yosemite Firefall has evolved into a natural spectacle observed annually. Unlike the original man-made Firefall event, the modern-day phenomenon is a captivating interplay of nature’s elements that occurs every February, replicating the appearance of a fiery waterfall without the use of actual fire in Horsetail Fall (Yosemite). Today’s Firefall occurs at Horsetail Fall on El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, where the setting sun illuminates the waterfall, casting a warm, fiery glow that resembles a cascade of fire. Stolen from Wikipedia. We sometimes stayed at the Glacier Point Hotel when we visited Yosemite when I was. much younger. I prefer camping out when visiting now.

     •  Reply
  15. Media 5dc187a4803260.04617927 fdd8684c13693e6d6c85e304b87dcbf01c6b0e48b4fdb1af66a6adf1388907b3
    anomalous4  8 months ago

    When I was a kid, Yosemite used to stage a “firefall” on summer evenings. They’d build a huge bonfire up on a cliff, have everyone yell “Let the fire fall!”, & shove the whole thing over the edge. It was an amazing sight, but it’s been ages since the last one – it’s too great a fire hazard on account of the recent multi-year droughts.

     •  Reply
  16. Attachment1662947346910
    soap12  8 months ago

    What BION stand for?

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    [Unnamed Reader - d0b7ea]  8 months ago

    B.I.O.N?

     •  Reply
  18. Giphy downsized
    Angry Indeed Premium Member 8 months ago

    Some people at work thought I was crotchety but I never gave a yarn what they though! ;-p

     •  Reply
  19. Giphy downsized
    Angry Indeed Premium Member 8 months ago

    I learned about that Horsetail Falls display in National Geographic magazine article I read few years back and also read an article in their “History” periodical about that battle in Mexico. So, ho-hum.

     •  Reply
  20. Mok
    mokspr Premium Member 8 months ago

    Where does a 27 pound gorilla sit? Orlando apparently.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    h.v.greenman  8 months ago

    From 1972 until 1968 the “Firefall” in Yosemite National Park was a nightly tourist attraction event where the embers of a bonfire were pushed over the edge of a cliff. It ended in January 1968 because George B. Hartzog, then the director of the National Park Service, determined that the number of tourists trampling the viewing meadows were causing too much damage. Mr. Hartzog further justified his stopping the event by citing that it was not a natural occurrence.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    jmcenanly  8 months ago

    The Mexicans may have won that battle, but they lost the war. If the United States hadn’t been busy with our own war, it might never have happened.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Ripley's Believe It or Not