good eating's mother of actors my name
is Sam and today I'm going to be talking
to you all about the world's greatest
wordsmith William Shakespeare or as I
call him Billy shakes Shakespeare is
beloved around the world by actors
playwrights and academics and hated by
children who have been forced to study
him at school even though that much
rather be dubbing to the sound of their
favorite Iggy Azalea track she's still a
thing right but what slightly strange
item did Shakespeare leave his wife in
his will
why do people named Joe Shakespeare
big-time let us know your guess in the
poll up above and what light through
yonder window breaks honestly I haven't
a clue to answer through those questions
are going to be answered so grab your
16th century rough from prepared to get
culture eyes as we come through 101
facts about William Shakespeare number
one William Darren Shakespeare was an
English poet playwright and actor who is
widely regarded as the greatest writer
in the English language and know his
middle name was not Darrin dr. test and
you failed number two
Shakespeare is often referred to as
England's national poet or by the more
poetic titles of the Bard of Avon or
simply the Bard the word bard means poet
and in medieval times and also Skyrim
referred to a tournament performers who
made their living traveling from place
to place telling stories they were the
stand-up comedians of their day except
not as funny and probably worst-smelling
number three the works of Shakespeare
consists of 37 plays over 150 sonnets
and two long narrative poems as well as
other bits and pieces that contemporary
story ins think he wrote but I'm 100%
certain because it was a long time ago
and stuff was crazy back then all the
way what's your favorite Shakespeare
play let us know in our snazzy little
poll number four the name Shakespeare is
thought to derive from the old english
word shackin meaning to brandish or
shake and spear meaning well spear the
name is descriptive of a confrontational
or argumentative person suggesting
Shakespeare may descended from
douchebags
number five in stratford-upon-avon
Shakespeare was born and raised okay
a lot better stratford-upon-avon is a
market town in a civil parish in the
English county of Warwickshire
stratford-upon-avon is also famous for
well nothing Shakespeare is the only
important thing about strap upon even
the truth hurts sorry not sorry number 6
Shanksville was baptised on the 26th of
April 15 64 just before a massive
outbreak of the plague in Stratford I'm
not saying that caused that by the way
it just happened at the same time
Shakespeare was lucky to have survived
more than 200 townspeople died - roughly
a sixth of the local population see what
I mean was crazy back layin number seven
shakespeare's baptism the 26th of April
indicates they was born a few days
earlier but his central database remains
unknown traditionally Shakespeare's
birthday is observed on the 23rd of
April which happens to be st. George's
Day the National Day of England number 8
William Shakespeare was the son of John
Shakespeare a businessman originally
from snitterfield a village located a
few miles from trap upon even and Mary
Anton the daughter of an affluent land
owning farmer posh people basically
number 9 Shakespeare's father was fairly
successful throughout his life and had a
varied career working a range of jobs he
is most often identified as the club
maker but also worked as a salesman a
moneylender even the mayor of Stratford
at one point he was appointed the
official Isle taste of the local borough
a role that involved testing bread and
ale for quality how am i jealous of a
16th century cloth maker number 10 there
is considerable speculation that william
shakespeare and the rest of his family
were practicing catholics this wouldn't
be all that surprising if it wasn't for
the fact that being a Catholic was very
much illegal at a time number 11 on a
related note one of Shakespeare's
relatives on his mother's side William
Arden was introducing Catholic who was
arrested for plotting an assassination
attempt against Queen Elizabeth the
first as a result of his crime he was
imprisoned in the Tower of London and
then hung drawn and quartered wow that
is a exciting family number 12 and the
age of 18 Shakespeare married 26 year
old Anne Hathaway who as you may already
know has since been reincarnated into an
Oscar award-winning actress
Shakespeare's marriage to Hathaway he
may have been fairly scandalous at the
time partially due to him being several
years younger than her and also pasty
because she was already super pregnant
at the time
number thirteen despite William
Shakespeare's legendary literary talent
it's unlikely that any of his immediate
family members could read all right must
be awkward hey check out this poem I
wrote I can't sum I can't read long okay
dad that's probably exactly how it
happened right number fourteen if you
want an indication of Shakespeare's
incredible legacy the only reason
starlings exist in North America is
because a German American named Eugene
Schieffelin imported sixty starlings
from England in 1890 because he wanted
to introduce all the birds mentioned in
the plays of William Shakespeare to
Central Park in New York starlings have
since become an invasive species across
the entire United States and have caused
a number of serious problems including
number 15 on the 4th of October 1960 an
Lockheed Electra plane crashed shortly
after takeoff at Boston's Logan Airport
after it flew through a flock of 10,000
starlings many of the birds were sucked
into the engines causing a catastrophic
failure that brought the plane down the
resulting crash claimed 62 lives and
legitimately would never have happened
if it weren't for Shakespeare signal
reference to starlings in Henry the
fourth part 1 yep that's right
Shakespeare mentioned starlings in a
play he wrote in the 16th century and he
literally called the death of 62 people
over 300 60 years later
number 16 at some point in the mid 15
80s are the 80s Shakespeare move from
his home in stratford-upon-avon to
London to ingratiate himself into the
London theatre scene it was essentially
the 16th century equivalent of a drama
school graduate basically number 17 the
years between 1585 and 1592 are known as
Shakespeare's lost gears as he pretty
much disappeared from the historical
record in this period a number of
theories exist as to what he got up to
in that time including a suggestion that
he was lying low to escape punishment
for deer poaching number 80 it's not
known definitively when Shakespeare
began writing but historical evidence
suggests that several of his plays were
on the London stage by 1592 Shakespeare
began working as an actor writer and
co-owner of the theatre company called
the Lord Chamberlain's Men who would
later be renamed the King's Men and no
not those ones number 19
incidentally the first patron of the
Lord Chamberlain's Men was Henry Carey
an English nobleman and quartiere
rumored to be the illegitimate son of
King Henry the eighth
number twenty funnily enough Shakespeare
was not immediately beloved when he
first arrived on the sixteenth century
London theater scene in fact many people
dismiss Shakespeare's works as popular
entertainment with a likes of Ben Jonson
and Christopher Marlowe enjoying far
greater popularity number twenty-one in
fact in fact the very first mention of
Shakespeare as a playwright appears in a
pamphlet written by theater critic
Robert Greene who referred to him as
upstart crow beautified with our
feathers essentially saying that
Shakespeare was full of himself
nup twenty-two
sadly Shakespeare's career was about to
be interrupted by yet another outbreak
of the plague this one so severe that
all London theatres were closed between
1592 and 1590 for in an attempt to stop
its spread
as a result shanks per stop writing
plays have began to write poetry
completing his first batch of sonnets in
1593 number 23 in 1597 the theatre in
which the Lord Chamberlain's Men
performed was forced to close following
a dispute with their landlord Reuben
there undeterred shanks burned his
bodies built a new theatre across the
Thames naming it the globe even though
it doesn't really look like a globe
number 94 took that number 24 during the
performance of Henry the eighth on the
29th of June 1613 a cannon shot set fire
to the globe snatch roof and within two
hours the theatre had burnt to the
ground
owing to woods well-known love of
combusting the theater was rebuilt the
following year because those theater
nerds were not going to let one
teeny-tiny devastating fire ruin their
fun number 25
Shakespeare produced most of his known
work in the twenty four year period
between 1589 and 1613 his early plays
were primarily comedies in history such
as much ado about nothing and Richard
the second before moving on to writing
iconic tragedies like Macbeth and Hamlet
up until around 1608 in the last phase
of his working life Shakespeare
collaborated with other playwrights and
wrote 20 comedies and romances such as
The Tempest
number 26 during his lifetime
Shakespeare performed before Queen
Elizabeth the first and James the first
the latter of whom was enthusiastic
patron of his work number 27 although
Shakespeare's referred to as an
Elizabethan playwright he wrote the
majority of his most popular plays
during the reign of King James after
Queen Elizabeth's death he would
therefore technically be more accurately
described as a Jacobean writer
actually number 28 in 1613 Shakespeare
was approaching fifty years old doesn't
look at though does he
historical evidence suggested he retired
to Stratford where he died three years
later the cause of shakespeare's demise
is not known for certain though some
historians believe that he was
dispatched by a fever after drinking
heavily number 29 interestingly
Shakespeare devised his own epitaph
which was written as a cursed repeal
brave Thebes it reads good friend for
Jesus sake forbear to dig the dust
enclosed here blessed be the man that
spares these stones and cursed be he
that moves my bones what an emo number
30 also interestingly the first
archeological investigation of
Shakespeare's resting place uncovered
signs of disturbance at the head end of
the grave corroborating a story
published in 1879 that alleged grave
robbers had stolen Shakespeare's skull
in 1794 so you know those guys probably
Holocaust number 31 when Shakespeare
died all that he left to his wife was
his second-best bed which many people
read at a cruel insult but this
interpretation is incorrect at the time
Shakespeare died it was common courtesy
to reserve one's best bed for guests
whereas the husband and wife slept in
the second best bed in the home and
inheritance was therefore a sentimental
gesture from Shakespeare given as a
reminder of their love number 32
sadly Shakespeare has no living
descendants that we can poke and prod
and harvest for cloneable DNA
Shakespeare's family line ended with his
granddaughter Elizabeth Bernard who died
childless in 1670 despite two marriages
number 33
interestingly Shakespeare was gone
father to the Future poet laureate of
England William Devanand
who died in 1668 Davenant would later
claim that Shakespeare was his father in
more than just God
number 34 during Shakespeare's lifetime
many of his plays were published with
varying quality and accuracy
it wasn't until 1623 several years after
his death that two friends and fellow
actors John Hammond ggys and Henry
Condell published the first folio and
more definitive collection of dramatic
words that included all but two of the
place now attributed to him number 35
regardless of how Shakespeare's plays
appear in the first folio no one is
actually completely certain of the exact
order in which Shakespeare wrote his
plays the first value is not dated and
Shakespeare left a little indication of
exactly when his plays were written
so scholars have done their best to
reconstruct the chronology of
Shakespeare's work based on external
documents the reference Shakespeare as
well as the examination with stylistic
development and various other means
number thirty-six playwright - Ben
Jonson wrote a preface in the
introduction of the first folio in which
he stated that Shakespeare is not of an
age but of all time
a claim that has so far proven true
number thirty-seven in the book brief
lives a collection of short biographies
written by John Aubrey Shakespeare
described as a handsome well shaped man
Shakespeare was a snack basically number
38 the celebrated mid twentieth century
English actor and director Laurence
Olivier once called Shakespeare's
writings the nearest incarnation to the
eye of God or I might calm down no one
likes a kiss bum
number 39 though academics have settled
on the contemporary spelling of William
Shakespeare's name dozens of unique
Spelling's were recorded throughout the
course of his lifetime with some
estimates putting the number of
variations above 80 English had not yet
been standardized at this point so
people just use whatever Spelling's that
were feeling at that moment in time as
I've repeatedly said was crazy back
there number 40 there are a total of six
surviving Shakespeare signatures he
spells his name differently in each one
and none of the misspelt William
Shakespeare number 41 incidentally
shanks plays handwriting was so messy
that experts have trouble deciphering it
the flip side of Shakespeare's Heretic
scribblings are so characteristic that
it's actually helped identify his
influence in the work of other
playwrights and poets the meaning of
life funnily enough the name William
Shakespeare is an anagram of I'm a
weakest speller self burn those are rare
number 43 despite the ubiquity of
Shakespeare's image in popular culture
there is actually no written
contemporary description of
Shakespeare's physical appearance and no
evidence that he ever commissioned a
portrait of himself likenesses of mr.
Shakespeare do exist such as the drew
shot engraving but how thankful they are
to the real deal is still up to debate
number 44 in 1856 the National Portrait
Gallery in London made its first
acquisition the chandus portrait of
Shakespeare attributed to the artist
John Taylor
number 45 evidence suggests that
Shakespeare probably wore a gold hoop
earring in his left ear all bling-bling
mother effers this whimsical little item
of jewelry can be seen in the famous
chandus portrait number 46 the
collective settings of Shakespeare's
play spanned twelve countries across
Europe Africa and the Middle East
despite the fact the Shakespeare almost
certainly never left England it's
believed that Shakespeare drew much of
his geographical knowledge of the
locations in his plays from
conversations with foreigners and some
of his better travelled friends number
47 Shakespeare's Macbeth is considered
by many actors to be cursed claiming
that productions of the play often
plagued by bad luck such as fires and
even deaths one interpretation states
that the curse is invoked by the
utterance of the plays name inside a
theatre as such actors often refuse to
say the word Macbeth and circumvent this
problem by instead referring to it as
the Scottish play that could just mean
Trainspotting these days though number
48 the comedy of errors is the only play
written by Shakespeare that mentions
America occurring in a second scene of
act 3 you're welcome
number 49 Shakespeare's Hamlet is based
on amlet a well known figure in
Scandinavian legend as recorded with the
Danish historian and author Saxo
gramatica s' though the narrative of
Hamlet features far more depth and
complexity than Ameth the stories tell
similar tales of murder and revenge it's
like the taking of it today although not
really at all number 50 some speculate
that Shakespeare's grief over the
untimely death of his 11 year old son
Hamlet may lie at the heart of the
famous tragedy Hamlet indeed the death
of Hamlet Shakespeare is thought to have
inspired a number of Shakespeare's
writings including parts of King John
Romeo and Juliet Julius Caesar and
Twelfth Night and Hamlet because after
all it's one letter different number 51
Shakespeare's Hamlet actually survives
in three different versions a 1603
version with 2,200 lines a 1604 version
with 3,800 lines and a third 1623
version with 3570 lines most scholars
believe that the 1603 version is the
closest that the players was actually
performed number 52
Mike Hamlet Romeo and Juliet is not 100%
original borrowing significantly from
the earlier story of Pyramus and Thisbe
a tale that has been retold by numerous
authors throughout history both stories
involve the children of feuding families
and like Romeo Pyramus is led to believe
that is below
has died prompting him to commit suicide
which in turn provokes this.b to do the
same number 53 but Shakespeare didn't
even lift the story from Romeo and
Juliet directly from Pyramus and Thisbe
Shakespeare adapted Romeo and Juliet
from an earlier play written by the
Italian writer Mattie Oban dello this
sounds really bad right now but actually
it was fairly common practice at the
time number 54 all 2800 three lines of
Shakespeare's Richard ii are written in
verse meaning it's written in a poetic
format this is in contrast of the mix
between verse and rythm less ordinary
speech found in shakespeare's other
plays which is otherwise known as prose
number 55 written at some point between
1519 1592 The Taming of the Shrew
contains the only word in the entire
works of Shakespeare that begins with an
X it appears in a speech divided by
Petruchio at the end of Act one in which
he referred to Sam Tippi the wife of the
Greek philosopher Socrates who is
legendarily difficult to get along with
to this end Shakespeare uses her name as
a byword for a bad-tempered nagging
woman number 56 adjudge 1770 lines long
the comedy of errors is Shakespeare's
shortest play often described as one of
his most farcical comedies the story
follows two twins who were randomly
reunited after having been accidentally
separated at birth
it's basically an Adam Sandler film
number 57 at the other end of the
spectrum Shakespeare's longest plays
Hamlet which is three times longer than
the comedy of errors as a result Hamlet
takes four hours to perform number 58
just over 62 percent of all lines in
Love's Labour's Lost rhyme making it the
rhyme used of all of Shakespeare's plays
number 59 scholars know that Shakespeare
wrote at least two plays that has since
been lost entirely the two that we know
of for the history of Cantigny oh and
love Labour's won and it's very likely
the Shakespeare wrote many more long
forgotten place to number 60 across all
of Shakespeare's plays there are forty
references to cats 200 references to
dogs and 600 references to birds sakes
we really like birds apparently which
obviously then later led to the deaths
of 62 people so thanks will
number 61 the vast majority of
shakespeare's 154 sonnets about love
were written to a young man who
Shakespeare addressed as fair youth
some believe that this time to refer to
one of Shakespeare's patrons Henry arias
slain and that
bird was in fact gay or at least
bisexual others believed that the love
expressed in these poems was merely
platonic but then scholars do have a
habit of declaring that certain
historical figures were just friends
with the people they wrote super gay
poetry belt but hey who knows number 62
Shakespeare seems to love love in fact
he seems to love love so loving much but
in the 1864 globe edition of
Shakespeare's Complete Works the word
love appears exactly 2191
times number 63 amazingly Billy shakes
is credited with inventing or at the
very least popularizing more than three
thousand wives that are still commonly
used in English Shakespeare included
well over 30,000 different words of his
works evidencing a boat computer at
least twice the size of that of an
average person to be fair though he
literally made up words so you know
really fair is it Nintendo 64 if you
want to get real specific about it
shanks big use 30 1534 different words
throughout his complete works and a
grand total of eight hundred eighty four
thousand six hundred forty seven words
when including repetitions
that's roughly one word for every person
living on the french island of réunion
thanks google number 65 do you think
that Justin Bieber and his merry band of
yes men were the first to use the word
swag how naive the word swagger was in
fact first used in 1590 by Shakespeare
in many ways the Bieber of his day in A
Midsummer Night's Dream number 66
not only did Shakespeare coin thousands
of english words he also originated
dozens if not hundreds of commonly used
phrases these include such hits as all's
well that ends well dead as a doornail
good riddance
and my personal favorite in a pickle
number 67 Shakespeare didn't even stop
at creating English words he also
invented many names that were
popularized by his plays and entered
Coen use these include beautiful names
like Jessica and Olivia number 68
according to Shakespeare professor Lewis
murder there are over 7,000 words that
appear only once in the works of
Shakespeare and never again
number 69 but you suffered me when
writing his many masterpieces
Shakespeare deliberately made
grammatical mistakes to build up the
attention of his audiences in the lead
up to important points in his plays yeah
yeah I made a mistake on purpose before
we'll heard that before William this
technique by the way is known as a
functional shift just in case you want
an excuse for making a mistake ever
again number 17
within Shakespeare the word thou is not
just a fancy old-timey version of you
Shakespeare makes a careful distinction
between the two pronouns using you more
formally and vow as a sign of
familiarity or even disrespect number 71
the longest why did all the works of
Shakespeare is oh jesus here we go and
II see honorific ability to dinner
tartar bus which appears in act 5 scene
1 of Love's Labour's Lost the word is an
adjective used to describe someone who's
in a state of being able to achieve
honors and hopefully I'll never have to
say that again number 72
according to reports Shakespeare was a
very quick and accurate writer his
friend and fellow playwright Ben Jonson
once stated that whatsoever he penned he
never blotted out a line number 73 in
the several hundred years since the
works of Shakespeare were written a
number of people have raised doubts
regarding their authorship the first
academic to formulate a comprehensive
theory doubting Shakespeare's authorship
was the American writer Delia bacon who
claimed the numerous plays and poems
were actually written by a group under
the leadership of Sir Francis Bacon with
Explorer Sir Walter Reilly as the
principal writer number 74 though the
claim that Shakespeare did not write
that many works attributed to him as a
fringe theory it is thought that some
degree of collaboration occurred in the
authoring of as many as seventeen of
Shakespeare's plays it's now thought the
Christopher Marlowe co-wrote the three
Henry the six plays alongside
Shakespeare and that all dwell the
Thames world was jointly written with
Thomas Middleton number 75 though
Shakespeare is of course famous for his
plays in poetry
many people are unaware that he was
actually an actor himself and appeared
in many of his own plays as well as
those of other playwrights
evidence suggests that Shakespeare
played the ghost in Hamlet and Adam in
house you'd like it he also appeared on
the cast list of several plays by his
contemporary Ben Johnson number 76 for
some observed reason it was illegal for
women in girls to perform in the theatre
during Shakespeare's lifetime and as a
result all the female parts were played
by men and boys women did not appear on
the English stage until the restoration
several decades after Shakespeare kicked
the bucket
it's good thing to otherwise I never
would have found the cordis it is
Jennifer Lawrence sir I'm sure we would
have found each other eventually
actually number 77 at the same time it
was also illegal for people to dress
above their social class because poor
people are scum in the eyes of Jacobi in
England anyway
as a result actors were given a special
dispensation to dress as Nobles on stage
Wow the past really sucked number 78
it's rumoured that the beloved English
Romantic poet John Keats was so
profoundly influenced by Shakespeare he
kept a bust of his hero with him while
he wrote in the hope that Shakespeare
would inspire him and spark his
creativity number 79 shanks beer can
also count presidents among his fans as
Abraham Lincoln was a known lover of his
place and frequently quoted them to his
friends somewhat ironically Lincoln's
assassin John Wilkes Booth was a famous
Shakespearean actor number 80 in the
King James Bible the 46th word of psalm
46 is shake and the 46th word from the
end of the same psalm is spear where we
gamma this some have speculated that
this was a birthday gesture for
Shakespeare by the Brooks translators as
it was published in 1611 which just so
happens to be the year of Shakespeare's
46th birthday number 81 the first
recorded amateur performance of a
Shakespeare play took place in 1623 when
both parts of Henry the fourth were
performed by a household and promptly in
the English county of Kent the am drum
enthusiast who commissioned the
performance was Sir Edward Deering him
also happened to be the first person on
record to buy a copy of the First Folio
following its publication in the same
year
number 82 the first recorded production
of a Shakespeare play in America was a
production of Romeo and Juliet staged in
New York City in 1730
number 83 in the 1750s the owner of
William Shakespeare's final place of
residence new place was a fern over the
name of Reverend gastral
he eventually became so infuriated by
the many tourists who came to visit the
house that he demolish it to himself in
1759 a crime for which he was promptly
kicked out of town number 84 in 1786
founding fathers John Adams and Thomas
Jefferson visited Shakespeare's house
together where they for some reason
chipped off a piece of his chair as a
souvenir
think you're allowed to do that none of
people's hounds us guys or at least I
was very heavily reprimanded for doing
so when I visited Samuel Jackson that
one time number 85 in 1901 the Irish
playwright George Bernard Shaw invented
the term bird omelette tree to describe
the excessive preference held by many
Victorians for anything to do with
Shakespeare before someone's jelly
number 86 as a result of Shakespeare's
historical significance and literary
reputation Shakespeare remains the
best-selling playwright in the world
over 400 years after his death his plays
continue to be performed more often than
those of any other played right number
87 every year the Royal Shakespeare
Company tells more than half a million
tickets for Shakespeare productions at
their theaters in stratford-upon-avon
New Castle and in London introducing an
estimated 50,000 people to their thirst
live performances of Shakespeare number
88
additionally Shakespeare remains the
best-selling playwright in the world
combined sales of his plays and poetry
are believed to surpass an incredible 4
billion copies new mr. trick bear JK
Rowling just include Harry Potter in
play oh wait you did number 89
not only that Shakespeare it's also the
most filmed author in the world his
plays and sonnets had been adapted into
over 420 related feature film and TV
productions around 80 of which were
versions of Hamlet making it the most
adapted Shakespeare play number 90
according to forbes calm if william
shakespeare were alive today the money
he'd be earning in royalties were then
up to around 15 million dollars per year
but he's not even alive today he's dead
number 91 over the century Shakespeare's
plays have been translated into every
major living language on earth and
adapted for other cultures there are
versions of his plays performed in the
traditional Japanese kabuki style and in
1970 South African playwright welcome so
me created a MOBA a Zulu version of
Macbeth number 92 Shakespeare and his
work have been referenced in several pop
songs in recent years
examples include Shakespeare in Love by
Layla Calif Romeo and Juliet by the dire
straits and Shakespeare's sister by the
Smiths
the British progressive rock band
Twelfth Night is named after Shakespeare
play of the same name and the classic
Taylor Swift ballad love story contains
numerous references to Romeo and Juliet
number 93 Shakespeare's legacy is even
been extended to the names of various
places and roads all over the world
and there's no greater honor than having
a road named after you Shakespeare
Crescent in hathaway Crescent in Manor
Park East London and named after him and
his wife and although there are no
British towns or cities named after the
bard North America has a couple
Shakespeare's the name of both a village
in Ontario Canada and a ghost town in
the US state of New Mexico number 94 the
majority of the 27 moons of Uranus come
on stop laughing you're better than that
I named auntie carriages from the place
of Shakespeare it's not cool and yeah
Uranus is 27 moons fun space fact day
that you got for free number 95 in 1964
Shakespeare became the first person
other than royalty to be featured on a
British stamp which is the ultimate
British honor number 96 there is a non
canonical book version of the first Star
Wars film written in the style of
Shakespeare's prose titled William
Shakespeare's Star Wars verily a new
hope the book contains choice lines like
I find thy lack of faith disturbing and
thou art my only hope
number 97 there's even a programming
language that's designed to make raw
code look like Shakespeare prose for
such a fun imaginative concept it's
rather unimaginative Lee known as
Shakespeare's programming language
number 98 some massive nerd has even
translated to Shakespeare's plays
handler too much do about nothing into
Klingon a fictional language from Star
Trek number 99 not only that William
Shakespeare is the only author with his
own TV decimal number it's 8 to 2.33 in
case you were wondering my oh my
thoroughly at number 100 as it turns out
Shakespeare may have a certain magical
herd to thank for his legendary
creativity analysis of pipe Spanish
Shakespeare's garden actually uncovered
traces of cannabis suggesting that the
Bard himself might have been a pothead
4 to 0 thigh blaze it number the 101
in 1926 a new religion called caodaism
was founded in Vietnam it since grown to
a membership of roughly 6 million people
in the Southeast Asian nation caodaism
has adopted numerous well-known
historical figures of saints including
Joan of Arc Victor Hugo Muhammad and yes
Shakespeare which is why he mentioned it
you're a good detective I like you that
was 101 fact about Shakespeare did you
enjoy yourself did you learn anything
did we miss anything let us know in the
comments down below for all of those
things but in the meantime though there
are two videos on screen right now for
you to watch I think you're really gonna
enjoy one of them at least until next
time I bite my thumb at you but lovingly
