The Friday Irregular

Issue #846 - 5th December 2025


Edited by and copyright ©2025 Simon Lamont
( Facebook  /  Bluesky )

tfir@simonlamont.co.uk

The latest edition is always available at http://www.simonlamont.co.uk/tfir/index.htm
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Unless otherwise indicated dollar values are in U.S. dollars. Currency conversions are at current rates at time of writing and may be rounded.
The Friday Irregular uses Common Era year notation.

CONTENTS



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O

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^ WORD OF THE WEEK

ocreate
  adj. wearing boots or leggings

^ ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

Friday 5th December
    - Day 339/365
  -   Many cities across the Levant were destroyed in an earthquake and subsequent tsunami, 1033. Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart died, 1791. Poet and author Christina Rossetti born, 1830. Flight 19, a group of TBF Avengers being flown on a training mission, disappeared in the hypothetical Bermuda Triangle, 1945. Snooker player Ronnie O'Sullivan born, 1975. Lawyer, activist and politician Nelson Mandela, 1st President of South Africa, died, 2013. International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development (UN). World Soil Day (UN).
 
Saturday 6th December
    - Day 340/365
  -   King Henry VI of England born, 1421. Royalist sympathisers were blocked from entering Parliament, clearing the way for the trial of King Charles I, 1648. Poet, songwriter and domestic accounts keeper Lady Grizel Baillie died, 1746. Actress Agnes Moorehead born, 1900. Ireland was partitioned one year after the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty, 1922. Nobel laureate economist Sir Richard Stone died, 1991.
 
Sunday 7th December
    - Day 341/365
  -   Roman philosopher, orator and politician Cicero was executed, 43 BCE. Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, husband of Mary, Queen of Scots, born, 1545. The Great Storm of 1703 made landfall in the south of Great Britain, 1703. Actress Ellen Burstyn born, 1932. The Imperial Japanese Navy launched an aerial attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 1941. Astronomer and astrophysicist Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin died, 1979. International Civil Aviation Day (UN).
 
Monday 8th December
    - Day 342/365
  -   The coronation of Louis the Stammerer as king of the West Frankish Kingdom, 877. Journalist, writer and opium addict Thomas De Quincey died, 1859. Pioneering filmmaker Georges Méliès born, 1861. The Galileo spacecraft slingshotted around Earth for the first time, 1990, and the second time, 1992. Actress Kim Basinger born, 1953. Computer scientist and programmer Betty Holberton died, 2001.
 
Tuesday 9th December
    - Day 343/365
  -   Byzantine general Belisarius entered Rome unopposed, during the Gothic War, 536. Mathematician and cartographer Gemma Frisius born, 1508. Artist Sir Anthony van Dyck died, 1641. Douglas Engelbart publicly debuted the computer mouse, hypertext and the bit-mapped graphical user interface in The Mother of All Demos, 1968. Singer-songwriter Imogen Heap born, 1977. Archaeologist and anthropologist Mary Leakey died, 1996. International Anti-Corruption Day (UN).
 
Wednesday 10th December
    - Day 344/365
  -   Artist Paolo Uccello died, 1475. The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica was published, 1768. Librarian Melvil Dewey, creator of the Dewey Decimal System, born, 1851. The United Nations signed the Human Rights Convention, 1948. Actress Susan Dey born, 1952. Writer and educator Olivia Coolidge died, 2006. Human Rights Day (International).
 
Thursday 11th December
    - Day 345/365
  -   King James II of England threw the Great Seal of the Realm into the River Thames while attempting to flee to France during the Glorious Revolution, 1688. Astronomer Annie Jump Cannon born, 1863. Businessman Oliver Winchester, founder of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, died, 1880. Actress and comedian Mo'Nique born, 1967. The Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions reduction opened for signatures, 1997. Author Anne Rice died, 2021. International Mountain Day (UN).


^ THE WISDOM OF...

This week, Nelson Mandela:
No one is born hating another person because of the colour of his skin, or his background or his religion. People learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.


^ FILM QUIZ

A selection of quotations from films starring Maggie Smith. Answers next issue or from the regular address. Last issue's quotations from films starring Sam Neill were from:


^ WEIRD WORLD NEWS

Strange stories from around the world, some of which might be true...

IN BRIEF: An AI-enhanced teddy bear that uses ChatGPT to interact with children has been withdrawn from sale. Kumma (yes, that is really its name...), made by FoloToy, was found to be offering dangerous and graphic sexual advice... ● An Air India Boeing 737-200 that has sat idle at Kolkata airport for more than 13 years is being moved on a trailer the 1,180 miles (1,900km) to Bengaluru where it will become a training platform for engineers. It is notable because Air India had forgotten that they owned it; its status only came to light after the airport made plans to clear the area around it for new buildings. ● Fifteen-year-old Laurent Simons, from Belgium, is possibly the youngest person to have ever completed a PhD in quantum physics. The youngest person to gain a PhD in any subject was the German Karl Witte, who received his doctorate in 1814 at the age of 13. ● It is, perhaps, the subject of some of the most heated arguments at this time of year, but a recent survey of British people for the British Board of Film Classification has found that a majority consider that Die Hard, the 1988 John McTiernan film in which Bruce Willis' NYPD officer John McClane fights a terrorist takeover of a Los Angeles skyscraper on Christmas Eve, is not a Christmas film... ● The Scottish Languages Act, voted through by the Scottish Parliament in June, came into effect on St Andrew's Day, making Gaelic and Scots official languages in Scotland. ● Ash Lambell, 33, has completed a 26-year mission to attend soccer games at all 92 English football league (72 English Football League and 20 Premier League) stadiums. He ended his journey watching Northampton Town, his home team, defeat Plymouth Argyle 3-0 at Home Park in Plymouth. ● Oxford University Press has named 'rage bait' (using manipuative tactics to drive engagement on social media) as their word or phrase of the year. ● Speed eater Travis Malouf choked to death while trying to eat a half-pound (250g) glazed doughnut in under 80 seconds during a competition at Voodoo, an American bakery chain. ● A 37.41 carat rough diamond, half pink, half clear, has been discovered at the Karowe mine in Botswana.

UPDATES: The three octagenarian Austrian nuns who ran away from an old people's home to return to their former convent have been told by Church authorities that they can stay there as long as they keep off social media.


^ OBITUARIES

Cricketer Robin Smith (Natal, Hampshire, England, 62), author Daniel Woodrell (Winter's Bone, Give Us a Kiss, Tomato Red, 72), guitarist Bob 'Bongo' Starkie (Skyhooks, 73), actor John Eimen (Leave It to Beaver, McKeever and the Colonel, The Twilight Zone, 76), playwright and screenwriter Sir Tom Stoppard (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, The Real Thing, Shakespeare in Love, 88), journalist Sir Andreas Whittam Smith (The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, co-founder of The Independent, 88), actress Jill Freud (Love Actually, Torchy, the Battery Boy, the inspiration for Lucy Pevensie in C.S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia books, 98), actress Lise Bourdin (Love in the Afternoon, Dishonorable Discharge, The River Girl, 99).


^ DUMBLEDORE BEAR'S LOTTERY PREDICTOR!

Dumbledore Bear, our in-house psychic predicts that the following numbers will be lucky:
6, 7, 24, 28, 44, 45
[UK National Lottery, number range 1-59]
You can get your very own prediction at http://www.simonlamont.co.uk/tfir/dumbledore.htm.


^ AND FINALLY...

    The teacher was telling the children about percentages. She had explained what they were and asked the class "OK, suppose I gave you a test with 20 questions and you got 10 right. What would you get?"
    The children thought for a moment then a hand shot up. "Yes, Little Simon?"
    "50%, Miss!"
    "Very good. Now, who can tell me what they would get if they got all 20 answers right?"
    Another hand went up. "Yes, Little Jennifer?"
    Little Jennifer smiled as only she could. "Accused of cheating, Miss!"


^ ...end of line