Did you know 2

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Did you know what actress won a Oscar and Emmy in the same year?


Helen Hunt won and an Oscar and Emmy in the same year, for As Good As It Gets and
Mad About You (1998).

The first performer to actually accomplish it
was Liza Minnelli, who won an Oscar for Best
Actress for Cabaret and an Emmy as the star of the Outstanding
Variety Program, Liza With a "Z" (1972).

To





Now if you didn't know, now you know...







To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you know what teams were dynasties?

To date only 6 teams have created dynasties, and they are...



1. 1950s-60s Celtics

Title run: 11 in 13 years. Take a deep breath – 1957, 1959-66, 1968-69.
What made them historic: These Celtics had the perfect recipe to create America’s greatest pro team sports dynasty. They had a great player (and big man) in Bill Russell, who galvanized the action on the floor. They had a great coach and even shrewder general manager in Red Auerbach, who got the players necessary to win titles and molded them. And they had an owner (also the team’s founder) in Walter Brown, who had only one question for Auerbach when he wanted somebody: Can the guy play? (Brown was the owner who broke the NBA’s color line by signing Chuck Cooper in 1950.) In the free-agency and salary-cap eras, winning 11 titles in 13 years seems impossible because you can’t keep players together long enough. But even in these Celtics’ pre-free-agency and salary-cap eras, this sort of winning was impossible to accomplish – except by Boston.




2. 1990s Bulls
Title run: Six in eight years – 1991-93, 1996-98.
What made them historic: This will be the NBA’s great what-if -– what if Michael Jordan hadn’t taken two years off in the middle of the 1990s? (Someday, someone is going to write a blockbuster book about what really motivated Jordan to, ahem, spend some time with his family and, later, pursue his dream of becoming a pro baseball player. Lest we forget, at the time of his 1993 retirement, various allegations about gambling and involvement with unseemly figures were swirling around Jordan. Just sayin’.) Would the Bulls have been the greatest dynasty of all-time? It’s ridiculous LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Harold Miner, et al, get tagged with Jordan comparisons, because no player will ever compare. No shooting guard is ever going to have the talent, competitiveness and Zen (supplied by Phil Jackson, the previously unknown coach who taught Jordan how to play nice with his Bulls unequals) to lead his team to such great heights. Even if he has a Scottie Pippen by his side.


3. 1980s Lakers

Title run: Five in nine years – 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987-88
What made them historic: Pairing one of the NBA’s greatest centers, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, with its greatest point guard, Magic Johnson. Johnson’s enthusiasm and omnipresent grin was the yin to Abdul-Jabbar’s serious-as-a-heart attack yang, revving up the Lakers’ Showtime era and, with Johnson’s college rivalry with Larry Bird carrying over to multiple championship battles, putting the NBA on the sporting map for good. By the way, do you realize how close we came to Johnson playing in Utah? The Lakers got the No. 1 pick to take Johnson because the Jazz had traded it for the aged Gail Goodrich. Although there was jazz in Johnson’s game, it is hard to imagine Johnson’s game in Jazz.


4. 1950s Lakers
Title run: Five in six years – 1948 in the NBA predecessor the
Basketball Association of America, then 1950 and 1952-54 in the NBA
What made them historic: The Minneapolis Lakers were the NBA’s first dynasty. They also were the first to prove that no matter what style of basketball anyone plays, no matter what great forwards or guards anybody else has, any team that has the dominant big man of its era will win a fistful of championships (exception: the Jordan Bulls). That's why the Portland Trail Blazers are eager to take Greg Oden as their No. 1 pick in the 2007 NBA draft. In the Lakers’ case, that dominant big man was a bespectacled chap named George Mikan.
5. 1980s Celtics
Mark Lennihan / AP
Dennis Johnson helped the Celtics beat the Lakers in the 1986 Finals.

5. 1980s Celtics
Title run: Three in six years -– 1981, 1984, 1986.
What made them historic: Three-in-six doesn’t seem dynasty-like, but the Celtics’ rivalry with fellow 1980s dynasty the Los Angeles Lakers (subtext: Larry Bird vs. Magic Johnson) defined the NBA and made it truly major league. The first Celtics’ championship run that decade included games tape-delayed for after-the-11-o’clock-news showing on CBS. By the end of their run, the Boston-L.A. series (they played three times for the championship, with the Lakers winning twice) was prime time all the way.

6. 2000s Lakers
Title run: Three straight, 2000-02
What made them historic: These Lakers were the supernova of dynasties: spectacular and explosive for a short burst, outshining everything else in the NBA galaxy, and emanating shock waves that reverberate even after the team is fading from view. You know the story. Coach Phil Jackson came out of retirement to make Shaq and Kobe (do you really need their last names?) play nice. Thus was born a never-a-dull-moment soap opera that, for a time, threatened to become bigger than Jackson’s Michael Jordan Bulls teams.



The Spurs won their third title in five years – enough to make them a true dynasty. There is no official definition of dynasty, but three in five years appears to be a minimum standard. Amassing four titles in nine years -– taking in the Spurs’ 1999 title -– doesn’t hurt their case, either.
Where do the Spurs rank among great NBA dynasties? Until they get a few more under their belt, probably among the bottom rung, not so close to the 1990s NBA Bulls. But this list is hard enough to make, much less rank at the top. It’s not being patronizing saying it’s honor just to be listed as a dynasty.



Did you know that Michael Jordan was not the number one draft pick?

Did you know what teams were dynasties?


Did you know the youngest person to score 40 points in a game?

Did you know who had the most NBA AllStar Appearances?

Did you know that Michael Jordan won?

Did you know what NBA player has won the most MVP?

Did you know that Robert Horry has more NBA championships than michael Jordan?

Did you know the only basketball award that Jordan did not win was high school state championship?




To see more did you know that trivia click here

Who are the only four actresses to win two Academy Awards for Best Actress on their only nominations?

Luise Rainer
(The Great Ziegfeld and The Good Earth)
Vivien Leigh
(Gone With the Wind and A Streetcar Named Desire)
Sally Field
(Norma Rae and Places in the Heart)
Hillary Swank
(Boys Don't Cry
and Million Dollar Baby)

Helen Hayes also won two acting awards on her only nominations,
Best Actress for The Sin of Madelon Claudet in 1931/32
and Best Supporting Actress for Airport in 1970.


To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you know who is the only performer to receive nominations for an Oscar, Emmy and Tony for the same role?


José Ferrer
won the very first Tony Award for performance for his Broadway turn
as Cyrano de Bergerac in 1946, and won the Oscar for the film version 4 years later.
He was also nominated for an Emmy for playing Cyrano on television in 1955,
but lost that award to Lloyd Nolan playing Captain Queeg in the
TV production of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial. He was also nominated for
his performance as Cyano on The Philco Television Playhouse in 1951
(losing to Alan Young), although that nomination didn't specify any single role.

Mildred Dunnock created the role of Linda Loman in
Death of a Salesman on the Broadway stage and received an
Oscar nomination for the 1951 film version and an Emmy Award
for the 1966 television version. The Tony for Outstanding Supporting Performer
was won by Shirley Booth in Goodbye My Fancy in the year Dunnock
debuted as Linda Loman, and in those early years of the award
the nominations were not made public. While it seems
unlikely that Dunnock wasn't one of the finalists for the Tony,
she was never officially declared a nominee.








To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you know the only individual to win an Oscar, Emmy and Tony in the same year?


. Bob Fosse
in 1973, winning the Oscar for Cabaret, the Tony for Pippin, and the Emmy for Liza with a Z.

Jason Robarbs was nominated for all three in 1978; for Julia, A Touch of the Poet
and Washington: Behind Closed Doors. He took home the Oscar.

Paul Newman repeated the accomplishment in 2003; receiving an Oscar
nomination for The Road to Perdition and a Tony and Emmy nomination
for his turn as the Stage Manager in Our Town.

Alan Alda pulled a hat trick in 2005, receiving an Oscar nomination for The Aviator,
an Emmy nod for his supporting role in West Wing, and a Tony nomination for his
performance in the acclaimed Broadway revival of Glengarry Glen Ross.

To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you know that George Bernard Shaw is the only man or woman to win an Oscar and a Nobel Prize?

oscar

Did you know that George Bernard Shaw won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1925?

Did you know that Shaw also won the Academy Award in 1938 for Best Screenplay for the film adaption of Pygmalion?

Did you know that George Bernard Shaw is the only man or woman to win a Oscar and a Nobel Prize?




To see more did you know that trivia click here


man-pointing
Now if you didn't know, now you know...


If you like what you are reading click and subscribe.

To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you know who had the most Steal in his career?

These are the giants who have the career highs in...
  Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

Points   38,387

























John Stockton

Assists 15,806
Steals 3,265

























Wilt Chamberlain

Rebounds 23,924


























Hakeem Olajuwon

Blocks 3,830























To see more did you know that trivia click here

Did you Know

Did you know that the average human brain contains approximately 86 billion neurons? These remarkable cells form intricate networks, allowing us to think, feel, and experience the world around us. Each neuron communicates with others through electrical impulses, creating a symphony of thoughts, memories, and emotions. So next time you ponder life’s mysteries, remember that your brain is orchestrating a cosmic dance of neurons!