Welcome to Fun Fact Friday. I'm your host Lila. And on your other host, David, I'm Lila's dad, I haven't said that in a while. Fun Fact, Friday is a weekly show where we discuss different topics and tell you some fun facts about it. As soon as it'll be in the website. For your player, we got to show it to the player or you can go to the website and get a note about that. So, Lila, what's our
topic? This week, the moon the moon, and this episode will be kind of short, because we're going to do a silly speculation Saturday after Yep. So we're gonna tell you some facts about the moon. And then some probably lies about the moon. Yeah, no, but the the website was was going to talk about, we only keep 20 or 30 episodes in our RSS feed, which is how your podcast player receives the show. And it's basically for bandwidth reasons.
And, but you can always go to Fun Fact friday.com and click the episodes to see all 100 And now after this 111 of our episodes with the links and, and all that good stuff and listen to them. But it's just some of the podcast players don't use pod bang. And they are constantly going and checking our RSS feed to see if it's changed. And you know, it eats up a lot of bandwidth or getting getting kind of up there and our listenership and we appreciate all of our new listeners by the
way. And we're we're enjoying the the wonderfulness of having lots of listeners, but we're also getting the bandwidth bills. So say let's see. All right, so we're gonna do our booster grams, which booster Graham is a podcasting 2.0 feature. Go to podcasting to nope, sorry, new podcast apps.com get a get a good player that you could send boosts to the show fountain, which is fountain.fm will pay you money to listen to our show. They pay you in little tiny bits of
Bitcoin called Satoshis. And you can send those right to your wallet. Or that was a thing you didn't I've told you about this. Were you not listening to me on our when we're driving and riding in the car? Maybe? Yeah. I don't have a very good attention. But yeah, fountain not everyone will pay you Satoshis to listen and then you can just forward those Satoshis right to the show you're listening to if they're broadcasting 2.0 value for value
enabled. Or you can send them to your own lightning wallet and then turn them into Bitcoin and then turn that into pizza or whatever you're gonna buy with your Bitcoin. But we did get some boosts since the last show actually, at the very last second of our live stream last week. We got one from blueberry. We were talking about we didn't have any good news for that week. And blueberry boosted 33,399 SATs. And he says the only good news is a good boost. And we definitely appreciate
that blueberry. You got some sets coming your way on near behind the scheme show. Soon as I get around to refilling my wallet. I've got the I've got the SATs. I just gotta get them into my wallets for sending them out. I'm a little behind on my my value returning value to the podcasts I listen to. And then we got one from Kyle a bear of the intergalactic boombox. Hey, Kyle. Kyle is is like Kyle. Yeah. Isn't that Kyle? Good guy. His his movie, Dragon Ball Super superhero. It's two
supers in a row. So out comes out next month. August 19th. I believe I could be wrong as that as that Friday right around there. I'm looking around there. So we're gonna Oh, we just got a live boost. Oh, we got a live boost from I don't recognize that icon. That's our very first Oh, that's a boost CLI. And it is from servo. And it is 33,401 sat more than blueberries live Boost, which I guess blueberry was the first line. It was right
after the show. I don't know. I don't know how. I don't know. It was during the official livestream on curio caster or pod verse or just on our ice cast server. So I guess blueberry did get the first one but server one up to him and he says one up. And then Kyle said candle farts are greater than electric vehicles. Because last episode we're talking about candle farts and I don't think oh know what this candle fart sound is gone. I didn't save it. Oh, the candle fart sound is
gone. I can pull it up. No, it's okay. And then we got one from for oh that Kyle says 10,000 We got 333 sets from bareness Love and Light says for the dad jokes and then an X I'm guessing that means kisses or the 10 Dad jokes. So yeah, thank you for the live boosts. If you want to join in the fun you can listen on curio caster or pod verse they support live boosting during live shows they will also if you subscribe to us they will let you know when we go live. It should give you a notification
that might just be pod verse. Might be curio caster, I can't remember. I'm sorry. Yeah, that was you. Are you accusing me of doing clicks and you're over there clicking? I'm not clicking. What's it? Oh, it's the wire. Yes. I need to get wire. Yeah. All right. So we're gonna be talking about the moon. And as always, thank you for everybody who sent us value. We appreciate it. I've got to get more channels because some of our channels are getting deleted, depleted. We're getting so many
boosts and and stream sets. I'm gonna have to start balancing my channels and figure out how to do that poopoo Zilla in the chat there's Have you ever heard of a vuvuzela? No. Oh my gosh. Okay, so why don't you I'm going to look this up real quick while we duplicate that if we lose ALA is a traditional I think it's is it Australian? Anyway, it's a very unique sounding instrument. So here is a vuvuzela concert a quartet Here we go. This is off
of YouTube. This guy has 160 subscribers. His name is Berlin ro phone should look up what if it doesn't have to do with the vuvuzela which was now been when it has farts? Its pupils ala What's up what we're talking about weird instruments. What's it called? The didgeridoo? The didgeridoo? Didgeridoo is one of my favorite you are aware of the didgeridoo you know you have access to the soundboard now Oh crap. Yeah, do you got access? Why don't you look up a didgeridoo now that's
an Australian one. I don't know. Well, maybe I'm gonna have to look up the Venice Venezuela the vuvuzela did that going? Oh there ain't gonna know if it was a copyright with the didgeridoo. Background Did you redo ambient music? Isn't it great. We don't have to worry about ads now. Okay, turn turn it down until you find the actual didgeridoo noise there we go here it is very light. Yeah, because you click the one that said ambient which is reduced
royalty free music. Alright, I'm trying to Yeah, hold on. I've got it it's just a big stick that you blow into. Yeah, like a home into it. You know you don't really harm you do like the little like a little wet. I don't know where to call it. This is not the moon. No. Okay. Okay, so we were going to do the moon. And then last week we got in the mail a a postcard flash card from K. So I guess this is K's corner. I gotta get it. We gotta get somebody who can sing to do that for
us. Me. I can sing decently. Okay, we'll record us a KS corner jingle? No, no, we'll do later. So the only 850 pounds of rocks and samples from the moon had been brought back to Earth by space missions of these big Molly is the largest moon rock brought back by the astronauts of the Apollo 16 mission. It weighs 26 pounds. That's a lot when it comes to space because talking about the fuel and the logistics of things in space. 20 bring it back at 26 pound rock
is that's quite quite expensive. The moon is 2159 miles wide. That's the same distance from Pikeville, North Carolina Leina to Bogota, Colombia, or Spokane, Washington. The Wright brothers made their first flight six, first successful airplane flight and 1903 with the Wright Flyer that was in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, right on the road from us. We're not having you know, but within driving distance. Yeah, it's in North Carolina. anywhere in North Carolina, it's driving distance,
everything's driving distance if you're brave enough. In 1969, Neil Armstrong took pieces of the Wright Flyer with him to the moon on the Apollo 11 mission. This was the first manned mission to the moon, only 66 years after humans began to fly. The trip to the moon was the first sci fi movie it was released in 1902. By Jorge Maitlis. MTL ies with lots of little lows. I don't think so because of the accents over the eye, the ease is what comes forward and one of them
backward. And I don't know how that's pronounced Melius millions they're like me. That was the first film director made the first sci fi movie. So in honor of that, which I've, if you've seen it, there's a picture of the dude with the moon face, like the moon with a face on it, and then the spaceship crashes into its eyeball. I'm sure everybody's seen the picture. It was actually called Live we as dans la lune. So you know, French 1902. And since it is 1902, that means that it is in the public
domain. And you know what that means? It's royalty free. We can play it on the show. Are you ready for some audio from the trip to the moon? Sure. And go are you good? Yeah, it's not playing? Yes. No, it's not. Yes, it is. It is. It's a silent film. It's Oh, so funny. Yeah. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. The can't hear it. Okay, so Lila, back in the day, when films first started out, they did,
they didn't have any audio. And they would have a band actually play like the soundtrack, like play what was happening, and like alive, so there'll be Music To accompany it. But I don't know which of the music that is on the YouTube versions of it. I don't know which of the which of those is copyright free. So I don't want to. I don't like using other people's stuff without their permission, or without it being public domain
or whatever. So anywho it's a very short movie. It's like just under 13 minutes long, and it's about them taking a trip to the moon and landed on the moon. And it's it was the first sci fi movie. So there you go. I'll link to that in the show notes. Got the full movie. There's a couple of different versions on YouTube with music behind it and stuff like that. But yeah, got a
troll. Gotta troll the trolls. All right, so why don't you tell us some actual real facts about the moon besides what Kay just sent us which was awesome. And we got another one from Kay. A few days ago or yesterday. And we will do that. We don't have ads in our PO Box. Yeah, PO Box is trying to get get the the ads. But we will do that one on the next episode. Because we're going to do this one now. Actually, actually, no, I'm gonna go grab it. Because
we're not doing a live episode next week. We're not even recording an episode next week. So we'll go ahead and talk about it. Or do you want to wait? No, because the silly speculation Saturday is gonna come out next week. Oh, we're gonna alternate. Oh, all right. All right. Cool. Until we figure out if we're just gonna go all solely speculation Saturday, who knows? Everything's in flux. So tell us some good facts about the moon and I will get the notes for this week's case corner.
Okay. The moon. The moon's the Earth. Earth's only permanent satellite. It is the fifth fifth largest. Oh my gosh. It is the fifth largest natural natural satellite in the solar system and the largest among the planetary satellites relative to the size of the planet that orbits okay. The moon is the second densest satellite Among those among those whose densest are known anyway, the first densest is Jupiter satellite IO. My favorite of Jupiter satellites is Europa. It is made
of ice. I made a whole presentation for it. For my class the last year, the moon always shows the Earth, the same face. And the Dark Side of the Moon is just the side of the Moon that never faces us. So Dad, are you back? Yes, I'm back. All right, speaking to the mic. Alright, so we're gonna talk about the moon some more, and then we'll get to case corner towards the end of the show. Yep. What he had to say about the moon. Okay, so the moon. I like I like talking about the the phases of the
moon. You used to be obsessed with the phases of the moon? Yes. You used to when you were probably four or five. You'd go outside and you'd be like, Oh, it's a waning gibbous or you know, whatever. Whatever phase it was a diva know the phases anymore. Waxing, crescent, waxing, gibbous. Full new. And then waning. gibbous and waning. Crescent, and then half and half. Right? Yeah. Right. You used to use gnome. Like, you could look at them and
be like, Oh, it's this Oh, it's that. You're all over it. Now. You're just like, oh, it's moon. Its moon. It's a new moon tonight. Yeah, there you go. No moon, but like the the orbits of the moon and things that just the movements of the moon is what I like and how it relates to the earth. And I found a thing that talks about the four different kinds of lunar months. So our months correspond approximately to the length that it takes for our natural satellite, the moon
to go through full cycle phases. And there's four different kinds. And therefore different durations are all about the same, but a little bit different. So there's no ballistic, not animalistic. Oh, and no ballistic anomalistic Why don't you just, that would make more sense. You just why don't you just mind your business? Okay. Yes, anomalistic. Okay. anomalistic the length it takes for the moon to circle the Earth measured from one pedigree, the closest
point in its orbit to the earth, the dog food to the next. Yes, exactly. That's why they needed the dog for that. What, what does pedigree mean? I'd set it right after I said it. It's the closest point in its orbit to the earth. So it you know, comes in and moves in and out a little bit, just a little bit. And when it's at the closest to the earth, that's called Billy bone. So Billy
Bones just joined the chat. A new challenger has appeared. So it's 27 days, 13 hours, 18 minutes and 37.4 seconds for the anomalistic. And then you've got no decal? No, no, it's not nautical, like the, you know, the ocean stuff. It's an odd, I see a L. And that's the length of time it takes the moon to pass through one of its nodes, which is where it crosses the plane of the Earth's orbit, and to return to it. And that's 27 days, five hours, five minutes, and 35.9 seconds, which is about
eight hours shorter than the other one. You've got side real, which is the length of time it takes the moon to circle the Earth using the stars as a reference point, which is 27 days, seven hours, 43 minutes and 11.5 second works. What do you mean? I know that it orbits the Earth, but the earth also spins and if it has, if, if you're in Asia, right, okay. And you know, gosh, okay, just let me talk. Okay. So we are in North Carolina, and we
can see the moon. If the moon's out. How does Asia see it? Because it's on our side of Earth. If you were to take blender, right, or other 3d modeling software, and you were to create a sphere, which the earth is a sphere, sphere. Now that's not a perfect sphere, okay. But if you look at if you render it out, and then render out a moon, that distance away. There's also there's this thing called lensing. But you're not you're not realizing how far away the moon is.
Yes, I know the moon is really far away. But like how do you? How do you see it? With your eyeballs? Lila? But like, is it on all sides of the Earth at all times? No, no. How does that work? Because time travels forward, I don't understand time. Spinning around the Earth and the Earth is spinning, too. How does how does it work? Is it just really fast? So it goes, I'm going to introduce you to a there's some space simulators. The earth spins faster than the moon orbits. Okay, uh huh. But
okay, we're gonna. Okay, next question. We're gonna have to find you in a space simulator. So you can look it I can just look it up. Yeah, you can look it up. Oh, look up. Look at us and all right. Anywho maybe we'll discuss it next episode. violation. Side side real pronunciation. Oh, ere we go. Say do real. Serial. How does say do did you say that? What? When I say do real side real. I said tried real though. I told him to stop. Okay, okay. There we go. Claims. When do you say that?
I said it when we go. I said the length of time it takes the moon to circle the Earth using the stars as reference point. Right when he started talking about how can they see it? And besides real I did though. I didn't say side Uriel, which is the proper pronunciation. Thanks, MO. Yeah. Billy bone says the flat earth is how everybody can see the moon at the same time. It's turtles, turtles, turtles, turtles all the way down. And then there's synodontis Senate who came up with that? Sinad
Dicle Synoptical. Who came up with what? Turtles have the turtles? Yes. Oh, they've been talking about the earth being flat disk supported by a turtle for for a long, long time. Okay, that's been, I can't remember. I don't remember where it originally came from. I read it one time, but I don't remember it was a long time ago. I looked into it to see the validity of the turtle theory. But I'm back. Again, like John Mulaney would say right, I've got one more type of type of lunar month. Let me get
through it. Yeah, thank you. So nautical, the length of time it takes the moon to circle the Earth using the sun as a reference point. That is a time lapse between the two successive conjunctions of the sun. Going from New Moon to New Moon as 29 days. 12 hours. 44 minutes. 2.7 seconds is the synoptic month. That is the basis for many calendars today. And is used to divide the year you remember our calendars episode? No, there was some weird ones. Yeah. The moon is drifting away from the Earth.
I have been here and that my whole life and I'm 79 years old accidently 3.8 centimeters away from our planet every year. So how old are you? 79. All right. So let's pull up this nifty calculator. And let's do 4040 times three point what? Eight. But here's the has drifted. Here's the problem though. Yeah, no one will know what you're talking about. Because it's in centimeters. How many centimeters? Is it? 140 3.4 3.8 Hold on. So we're gonna do 443 38 It's a calculator. Why not just
know what didn't work? It's 150 to 250 centimeters. That could be a mile my gosh, that could be four inches. I'm sure nobody knows how far that is. 152 space. Oh, wait. 152 cm two two. I am here we go. 59.84 60 inches. So five years? Sure if that's what that is. Yes. 60 divided by 12 is five. See how easy it is? Since 1982. Now how come and floor away? We could shoot it. We shot it with dudes. We could steal the moon. What? Like grew? Wait, are you saying
spoilers to a movie? No. That's just the entire Plot of Despicable Me is it to steal the moon yeah, and then vectors trying to steal the moon faster than group and get I think I have watched vaguely remember that movie he's a very, very vague I just remember they're trying to steal the moon because in the song it's just like the moon in my hands in earth like moon or like mine so we see 59% of the moon. The moon has quakes to moonquakes. You know? Don't I don't get why we call don't just call it
earthquakes on the moon. Not to call it Moon quakes. It just don't does it didn't sit right. Moon is better than Earth. This. There's no people there. It'd be so much better. Yes. I could play my switch. I don't think the moon exists. Is it a hologram? It's it's a mirage. We're getting into silly speculation by the Republicans. Well. Where are you reading this? My brain? I'm just making stuff up. Oh my gosh. Had to bring a political party into it. Right. Hey, you get it.
That's how you get a news article. All right. Anyways, there's water on the moon. I could still have water if I lived on the moon. Oh, yeah. Like is it drinkable water? Can you just like chat with Dustin minerals under the surface? Gotcha. But so I have to look into how they know I was detected can get her off Facebook read it to me real quick. This is the form of ice trapped within dust and minerals on and
under the surface. It has been detected on areas of the lunar surface that are in permanent shadow in there for a very cold. Okay. Anybody Nice. So it's been detected. They haven't actually like gotten any of it? No, they probably haven't. They're probably using like radars and all different kinds of different techniques to get the Yeah, what the makeup of it is, and whatnot.
And last night, we were supposed to record this podcast, I looked at the NASA site, and I looked at all of the satellites that have been flown out from Earth. There's a lot more than I thought there was. Hi, hello. Hello. So in the fun in the fun and the fact in fact, in the Friday morning. We got people coming in and out of the chat and we're just Good morning. Good evening, and good night. And tonight. We are um we're ASO. What else do they have? There was
a I have gash monographic kids, okay. A lot of these are very basic. Well, I mean, it's a kid site. Yeah, it's a kid site. And you read some pretty basic. So it's the Earth's only satellite. We've already said that. Have you heard the thing that it's just a piece of Earth? Yes, I've heard that. It's the Earth's twin. I've heard that. I've heard that it's a ship of some sort. All right, that I've heard that we were brought here in the moon. That's like our
mothership. And that explains a lot of things about it that we'll talk about until the speculation Saturday. All right, next week. And coming up next for if you're listening live at FunFactFriday.com and then I've also heard that it's hollow. I believe they shot a big ball of metal at it. And it rang like a bell is what they say hope there's a big hazelnut inside of it. It looks really tasty. Looks like a forever rochet there was a Doctor Who episode where there was a dragon okay.
There was a Doctor Who episode where it cracked open and it was actually an egg. Dragon. Can you name the dragon on somebody else's fictional television show? Yeah, I suppose. All right. What do you name the dragon? My name dragon. There's a movie called Dragon heart. Where he he's like I'm not gonna just keep calling you dragon. I gotta come up with a name for it. He's like, Draco. He's like, what's Draco is like just means dragon in a different language. Oh, and that was Sean
Connery voiced the dragon and that was really good movie. Oh, good. Good for what when it came out and my age at the time. So there's a bunch of moon rocks missing. During the 1970s, the Nixon administration gave rocks taken from the moon surface during the Apollo 11 Apollo 17 missions to the leaders of 270
nations as well as some states. Quote, we'd like to share a piece of this rock with so many of the countries throughout the world and quote Apollo 11 Astronaut Eugene Cernan said about the lunar meter meteorites later known as goodwill moon rocks. Unfortunately, more than 100 of these rocks when went unaccounted for and are suspected to be circulating in the black market. While working at NASA in 1998, Joseph goon TAS created a covert operation called Operation lunar eclipse
to crackdown on the illegal sale of these rocks. Why all of us, a pea sized piece of moon rock could garner up to $5 million in the black market, according to the BBC. Rock. That sounds pretty cool. Yes. Now according to the letter that we got from K, which the link will be in the show notes in the paste bin for ks Moon note. There was a rock that weighed 26 pounds. So how many millions of dollars are worth or big Mali worth? They've pulled
850 pounds of rocks and samples from the moon. So that's a whole lot of money. If you're selling it all. Hello, okay. I was looking at this other one. So there's a guy. There's a guy named Dennis hope that thinks he owns the moon is his name vector. That's John's hoax. Hope I just said yeah. We need to change his name to vector. You stole the moon. petrified wood goes for 5 million on the black market. I don't know what
I don't know. All right. And 1980 seemingly exploiting a loophole in the 1960s 1967 United Nations treaty in of space ownership, which states that no country may lay claim to the solar system. Nevada resident Dennis hope wrote to the UN and declared individual ownership. He did. He did not receive a response. But why wait on this entire solar system. Before y'all even see me go to college. I'm going to own the entire not the entire ocean, but
the entire solar system. I will be your control of all of you. So this dude politician, so old Dennis set up a lunar embassy and begin selling one acre plots of the moon for 1999 each. Along part of the moon moon rock is really just petrified wood on NPR. Okay, I gotta get that link for the show notes. Open Lincoln browser. There we go. Now I've got it forever. Oh, it's a 29 second
listen. And as long as we comment on it, we're in the clear for copyright because then it's part of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act carve out for education and information. Okay. Good morning. I'm Steve Inskeep musician in the Dutch National Museum is not what the curators thought. Back in 1969, the Apollo 11 astronauts visited the Netherlands and the US Ambassador gave the Dutch Prime Minister what he said was a
moonrock. No doubt it gave a warm feeling to the US ally. But when an expert saw it in the National Museum, he said he wasn't so sure it was real. Geologists have now identified the moon rock as petrified wood. It's morning edition. Thank you, man. Now more NPR. Wait. Thank you, Steve. O Stevens, keep host of in PRs, diversions, or sorry, Morning
Edition. Is that heard on Morning Edition? Yeah, so I guess it's they somebody somebody took the real one and replaced it with petrified wood or you need to listen to silly speculation Saturday next week. We're gonna talk about that. That's the show. That's all folks. So there's a teaser. Yeah, I don't I don't have much else. So there's Dennis guy. He's selling blots for 20 bucks apiece. He claims to have sold extraterrestrial property to
celebrities and three former US presidents. For the UN, the solar system is considered in the same way as the world's oceans outside of the economic zone and therefore belonging to everyone on Earth. So you do on the entire ocean? I do. Except for everything within 12 miles of a nation or nation state. So I own half of the entire ocean. You own a good chunk of it? Yes. Do I. I don't know. This is a quote from Edberg. It doesn't really say who Edberg is. But
let's see doesn't really say. I don't know if Dennis hope doesn't understand this or if he's just trying to force the issue to get some legal interpretations. So that development of resources in the sky can begin with less legal uncertainty. Oh, so he's, this guy thinks that Dennis hope has some grand plan to get laws written down so people can start developing resources in the sky. I think that Dennis hope came up with an idea to sell nothing for $20 to sell a certificate, like
a little piece of paper a printed for $20. Yeah. And I think that he made a lot of money doing it probably like that thing where you can be called the Lord. Yeah, I was actually I was looking at that the other night. Yeah, if you own land in Scotland, then you are technically a lord. Well, there are people that own land in Scotland who are willing to sell you a small small piece of their land foot by foot.
Yeah, one foot by one foot square. And technically since you own that land, your name is is written and entitled to that land. You are technically a Lord by Scottish tradition. So for folks out there who want to read more, Ben Mezrich, me z r i c h has an interesting book on the subject of stolen moon rocks, but it's not for kids. So, so let's let's not get that if you're a kiddo. Yep. Kids don't read these days. So I think that we're about done with the Fun Fact Friday portion. If you're
listening live Stay tuned. We're gonna do our little outro Oh, KS corner. Yeah, let me skim over this. I actually have not even read it. I just opened it. As it said read it on the show. That's what I'm skimming for. Looks like it's a cool topic. Did he have anything on the envelope? does not say? Yeah, so it doesn't say that it's not for the show. So we are going to assume it's for the show. And I will scan it with the blacklight here in a minute to see if he wrote Yeah, that's for
sure turn you down so you don't bump your mic. ere we go. Faberge eggs which I think are kind of cool. Do you have a blacklight okay here. I'll check it later. Mike so Faberge eggs are you know what a Faberge egg is? Have you ever seen one? No going attorney down go ahead and Google it. Okay. f a b e r g e eggs. They're the fancy egg the party ones. Faberg. It's February j because there's a accent on the last E Faberge
eggs are. I did I thought I did. You didn't fabric fabric. Fabric eggs are intricate egg shaped works of art decorated with gold and jewels that were created by Russian jeweler Peter Carl Faberge between 1885 and 1917 which is interesting because they weren't invented until 1978 by Joseph Faberge eggs it was common in the 1800s for Russians to give gifts of egg shaped artwork for the Easter holiday. Tsar Alexander the third
commission the creation of the egg from the blouse. Of Faberge the house of fabric is almost look like blouse because of the way that the H is written. That's an interesting trips. Okay, from the house of Faberge in 1855 as a gift for his wife Maria fair Federer over the first this first egg was known as the hen egg. It is a white egg with a gold band around the middle. Opening the egg, you would find a yolk made of gold and inside that is a Golden Hen wearing a diamond crown with a
Ruby pendant. Wow. The Empress was so happy with the gift that the Tsar commissioned Faberge to create an egg for her every year. His only requirement was that the egg should contain a surprise inside. Each egg was a surprise even though the Tsar, even for the Tsar himself. The design was kept secret, and not even Tsar Alexander knew what it would look like until he received it. I wish I could say I haven't even read it. What? Read it? I don't know. Oh, maybe the book No, no, but yeah, the book.
Yeah, the book that we were talking about. So when Tsar Alexander died in 1894, his son Nicholas the second continue the tradition of giving Faberge eggs to his mother as well as his own wife. By the time they were Russian Revolution overthrew the imperial family in 19 1750 Eggs had been created. Of those eggs 44 are known to exist today. And additional 15 were commissioned by various wealthy people. One of them was made in 1902 for
Baron Eduardo de Rothschild, the Rothschilds, huh? This egg is pink with a watch face on the front, a diamond encrusted rooster pops out of the top to mark each hour. It is the most expensive Faberge egg to be sold at auction going for $16.5 million in 2007. The Empress is third egg was made in 1887. It was only three and one quarter inches tall, but made with solid 18 karat gold and encrusted with sapphires and diamonds. The surprise inside was a 14 karat gold watch, it went missing in
1922. In 2004, a scrap dealer bought the egg in a brick of rack store for $13,000. But neither he nor the seller knew when it was intended to sell the object to someone who knew he knew would melt it down for the value of the gold and jewels. But nobody would offer him more than he had paid for it. Not wanting to take the loss. The egg sat as a decoration in his kitchen for years. And 2014 He decided to look for more information on the internet. And he found an article describing
the Lost egg. And the new what he had. The expert confirmed that it had was the egg lost in 1922. It was then sold to a private buyer for an undisclosed amount. I'm willing to bet the scrap dealer made his 13,000 back and then some Yeah, that was a good investment that he thought was a bad investment. I've made a few of those and I've made a few of the other Oh, this is a good investment. I'm gonna put some money in this. Oh. So we have failed in making this short.
Yes, we have failed in making this Fun Fact Friday short as we do every time we're going to say this is going to be a short one. But we are going to wrap it up now. I don't believe we received any Pay Pal payments this week. So so everyone have a good weekend. Have a great weekend. Next week is going to be a canned saw solely speculation Saturday if you're listening on the weekly schedule and not live.
So you're recording it tonight. But yes, any boosts that come in between now and then will be read on the following week's live show. And we will see y'all then. Bye. Thanks for coming, everybody. And joining us in the chat. Stick around for silly speculation Saturday if you're listening live. Fun Fact Friday with Lila and David is amoenus media production. All rights reserved. Unless otherwise. If you'd like to help support the show, you can make a donation via Patreon we pay over
at Fun Fact. friday.com Just click the donations link in the top of the page. Please follow like and subscribe and join us next week for another Fun Fact Friday