You are here:
Home / Archives for Mary Ann
Kids love to play with action figures. Adults do, too- they just call themselves collectors. Some action figures are awesome; but, let’s just say that some come out …wrong. Wrong in ways that leave you scratching your head decades later. A set of criteria was used to develop this list. First, no women. It just [...]
Posted by Jim Ciscell on Friday, July 13, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Entertainment, Humor · Tagged action figures, Alan Hale, Austin Power, Austin Powers, bad action figures, Don Most, Ernest Borgnine, fat action figures, G.I. JOE, Gilligan's Island, Harry Booth, Harry Mudd, indiana jones, James Ciscell, Jesse, Kenner, Kenneth McMillan, Mary Ann, Mego, Mike Myers, Mudd, Paulie Pennino, Ralph Malph, Rocky, Roger C. Carmel, rubber squeezable features, Sebastian Shaw, Skipper, star wars, The Black Hole, The Dukes of Hazzard, worst action figures
If ever there was an ill-fated three hour tour, it would be that of the S.S. Minnow. The pleasure cruise set out from Hawaii with an eclectic group of passengers including a multi-millionaire and his wife, a Hollywood starlet, a professor and a farm girl. Why these people ended up on the same boat was [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Tuesday, October 12, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Television · Tagged Boris Balinkoff, Castaways, Comedy films, Desert island, favorite episodes, fearless Skipper, Friendly Physician, Gilligan, Gilligan's Island, ginger, Hamlet, Hans Conried, Harold Hecuba, HH, HH Gregg, Hollywood, Howell, James Cameron, Kurt Russell, Mary Ann, millionaire and his wife, NASA, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Phil Silvers, pleasure cruise, Rescue from Gilligan's Island, Rick Bitzman, S. S. Minnow, shipwreck, Television, The Castaways on Gilligan's Island, The Professor, three hour tour, thurston howell, top 10 gilligan's island, TopTenz, tv shows
The depth of our collective history has countless stories, including some that we have yet to find the ending to. These mysteries have been puzzling scholars for years and many still remain unsolved: 10. The Mystery of Stonehenge Built in three sections over 6,400 years by the Neolithic inhabitants of Salisbury Plain in Southern England, [...]
Posted by Loni Perry on Monday, August 2, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, History · Tagged Aaron Kosminski, Albert Victor Christian Edward, America, American Fact-Finding Committee, american history, Anna Mitchel-Hedges, Annie Chapman, archaeology, archeaology, Arkansas,United States, Arthur Did, artifact trader, atlantis, author and mathematician, Azores archipelago, Baltic Sea, bermuda triangle, British Columbia,Canada, British Museum, Canary Islands, Catherine Eddowes, Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in Ethiopia, Crystal skull, Dealey Plaza, Dracula, E. Howard Hunt, Earl Warren, Edward VII, Elizabeth Stride, Eugene Bodan, Francis J. Tumblety, Francis Thompson, Frederick Albert Mitchel-Hedges, Frederick Deeming, geologist, George Chapman, George Lusk, Gibraltar, Giza Plateau, Great Sphinx of Giza, Hardstone carving, Hercules, Hercules Incorporated, History, Hitler, indiana jones, Island of Atlantis One, Jack Ruby, Jerusalem, John Anthony West, john f kennedy, John F. Kennedy John, Jordan, King of Prussia, Konigsberg Castle, Lee Harvey Oswald, Lewis Carroll, Lucius Artorius Castus, Lyndon B. Johnson, Marie Jeanette, Mary Ann, Mary Ann (Polly) Nichols, Mary Jane, Mehmed II, Mexico, Michael Ostrog, Monmouth, Montague John Druitt, Mount Nebo, Mount Tsurugi, Nature, president, Pseudoarchaeology, Robert M. Schoch, Royal Air Force, Schoolbook Depository Building, Skull, Soviet Army, Soviet Navy, Soviet Union, Sphinx, stonehenge, Syria, T. Neil Cream, Temple Mount, Temple of Solomon, Thomas Cutbrush, Tiffany, Tiffany & Co., Tom Bulling, Tomb of Vlad Dracula Most, United States, Vlad III the Impaler, wales, Walter Sickert, Warren Commission, Wiltshire, Winter Palace, Yom Kippur, Zimbabwe