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Top Ten Baby Names of 1996: |
The Hotties and Fashion Icons: |
Leading Men and Hollywood Hunks: |
“The Quotes:” “Show me the Money!” |
Time Magazine’s Man of the Year: |
Miss America: |
Miss USA: |
FYI: |
The Scandal: Theodore Kaczynski, the Unabomber was captured. He had killed d injured 23 people in his 17-year spree. He was turned in by his brother, David, who recognized the writing style and the content his brother was talking about. Beauty Pageant Princess Murder: JonBenet Ramsey was found killed in her basement, and the killer was never found. |
The Mystery: |
Rap Star Murder: |
Actress Overdose Death: |
World News: |
US News: Prior to 1996, there was no requirement to present an ID to board a plane. The policy was put into place to show the government was “doing something” about the crash of TWA Flight 800. |
Pop Culture News: |
Ethernet inventor Robert Metcalfe predicted that the internet would collapse in 1996, promising to eat his words if not. In 1997, he took a printed copy of his column that predicted the collapse, put it in a blender with some liquid and then consumed the pulpy mass. Jim Carrey was the first actor to make $20,000,000 to star in a single film, The Cable Guy. After the release of the 1996 film Scream, which involved an anonymous killer calling and murdering his victims, Caller ID usage tripled in the United States. Oprah started her famous book club. In 1996 the remains of the “Queen Anne’s Revenge” Blackbeard’s pirate ship, were discovered off the coast of North Carolina. Meg and Jack White of the White stripes publicly portrayed themselves as siblings despite the fact that they weren’t related and had married in 1996 prior to the band’s formation. While creating the first Tomb Raider video game in 1996, a developer increasing Lara Croft’s breast size by 50% accidentally enlarged them by 150%. Others approved of the change before he fixed the mistake, and the marketing campaign emphasized Lara’s exaggerated body. It became a #1 hit. The made-up word from a 1996 Simpsons episode “embiggen” was officially added to the Merriam Webster Dictionary in early March of 2018. #cromulent The Waving Inflatable Arm Flailing Tube Man was created for the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. There is a light on top of the Capitol Records building in Los Angeles that spells out the word Hollywood in Morse code. It started blinking Hollywood in 1956 and has only stopped once in June of 1996 on Capitol Records 50th Anniversary where it blinked “Capitol 50”. Lottie Williams is the only person to have been hit by re-entering space debris. She was walking through a park in Tulsa Oklahoma in Jan 1997 at 3:30 am and felt a tapping on her shoulder. It was a piece of the fuel tank of a Delta II rocket launched in 1996. She was unhurt. The first person to stream their life on the internet was a 19-year-old woman, Jennifer Ringley on the Jennicam broadcasted her life from her college dorm room 24/7. At its peak, she got 7 million hits per day, a significant proportion of the internet at the time. On April 1, 1996, Taco Bell spent $300k on ads claiming that they purchased the Liberty Bell and named it Taco Liberty Bell, and earned millions of dollars in free publicity. Mary Tyler Moore offered a restaurant $1,000 to sell her a 65-year-old lobster so she could return it to the wild. Rush Limbaugh then offered $2,000 to eat the lobster. The restaurant denied both offers and kept the lobster as a mascot. It wasn’t until 1996 that minivans had sliding doors on both sides of the second row. Before then minivans did not have a sliding door on the driver’s side. Febreze fabric refresher began test-marketing in 1996. By 1998, it was sold nation-wide. SNL’s Dana Carvey had a show that only aired 7 episodes in 1996, and had a writing team including Steve Carell, Bob Odenkirk, Louis CK, Stephen Colbert, and Charlie Kaufman. Dave Chappelle was in a spin-off from Home Improvement, called “Buddies”. It premiered on March 5, 1996, and was canceled on April 3, 1996, after just five episodes. Neither the Spice Girls themselves or their management came up with the Scary, Sporty, Baby, Ginger, Posh aliases. They were devised by Top of the Pops magazine in 1996 and later adopted by the group. In 1996, Travelocity opened online. Early on, it was primarily traveling agents who booked flights on American Airlines. The future King of Jordan, Abdullah bin al-Hussein (then prince), made a cameo in an episode of Star Trek: Voyager in 1996. Animal Hero: Binti, a gorilla at the Brookfield Illinois Zoo, grabbed a 3-year-old who had fallen in the cage, protected him from the other apes, and delivered him to zoo personnel at the gate. Marvel Comics filed for bankruptcy in 1996. Marvel Comics writer Mark Gruenwald, upon his death in 1996, by request had his ashes mixed in with the printing ink for the collected edition of his series Squadron Supreme. Most first printings of the book probably contain some of his remains. The world record for keeping the original 1996/1997 Tamagotchi alive is Age 89 days. In 1996 the boxing career of former heavyweight boxing champion Tommy Morrison ended when he tested positive for HIV. However, in 2007 two nationally renowned HIV experts retained by the NY Times concluded that the 1996 result had been a false positive. Cost of a Superbowl ad in 1996: $1,085,000 |
The Habits: |
1st appearances & 1996’s Most Popular Christmas gifts, toys and presents: |
Popular and Notable Books From 1996: |
East End Show: |
Broadway Shows: |
Best Film Oscar Winner: |
1996 Entries to the National Film Registry: |
The Big Movies: (according to boxofficemojo) |
1996 Most Popular TV shows: |
1996 Billboard Number One Songs: March 23 – May 3: May 4 – May 17: May 18 – July 12: July 13 – July 26: July 27 – August 2: August 3 – November 9: November 9 – December 6: December 7, 1996 – February 21, 1997: |
Sports: |
Sports Highlights: |