Birds can tell what the speed limits are on roads.
The French Air Force has a squad of golden eagles, trained to hunt down drones.
Dragonflies can be used as drones by fitting them with tiny backpacks.
Japanese scientists have invented a robot bee.
The White House only got the ability to print double-sided in 2016.
Lyndon B. Johnson had a nozzle fitted to his shower in the White House that fires water at his genitals.
Donald Trump presses a red button on his desk when he wants the White House butler to bring him a Diet Coke.
Domino’s customers can place an order by tweeting a pizza emoji.
The world’s largest pizza was twice the size of a tennis court.
From 1974 to 1992, a third of all tennis Grand Slams were won by Swedish men; today, there are none in the top 150.
A Swede born with ‘a silver spoon in their mouth’ is said to have ’slid in on a shrimp sandwich’.
The Polish equivalent of ‘Were you born yesterday?’ is ‘Did you fall from a Christmas tree?’
The money spent on Christmas presents in the UK could fund the NHS from Boxing Day to 12 February.
Christmas crackers were originally called ‘bangs of expectation’.
The first Christmas tree erected in Trafalgar Square was transported at night because it exceeded the legal weight limits on British roads in daytime.
In the Australian outback, there is a road used for testing Supercars that has no speed limit.
Potholes in roads in 19th-century Argentina were filled with surplus sheep’s heads.
In 19th-century America, roads were paved with oyster shells.
An oyster thief in 19th-century London called Dando would eat dozens of oysters, then abscond without paying.
The Oyster card was created by Saatchi & Saatchi.
Wig-snatching was a common crime in 18th-century England.
In 2014, German police issued a fine to a one-armed cyclist for cycling with one arm.
The Olympic Village for the 1980 Winter Games in Upstate New York is now a prison.
South Korean sniffer dogs sold to the Russian police in Siberia have proved to be useless because they don’t like the cold.