The Friday Irregular

Issue #843 - 14th November 2025


Edited by and copyright ©2025 Simon Lamont
( Facebook  /  Bluesky )

tfir@simonlamont.co.uk

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Unless otherwise indicated dollar values are in U.S. dollars. Currency conversions are at current rates at time of writing and may be rounded.
The Friday Irregular uses Common Era year notation.

CONTENTS



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O

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^ WORD OF THE WEEK

soporose (or soporous)
  adj. sleepy

^ ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY

Friday 14th November
    - Day 318/365
  -   Alexander the Great was crowned pharaoh of Egypt, 332 BCE. Nell Gwynn, mistress of King Charles II of England, died, 1687. Composer and conductor Leopold Mozart, father of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, born, 1719. Nellie Bly set off on her successful attempt to travel around the world in less than 80 days, 1889. Actress Louise Brooks born, 1906. Short story writer Hector Hugh Munro aka Saki died, 1916. World Diabetes Day.
 
Saturday 15th November
    - Day 319/365
  -   Conquistador Francisco Pizarro arrived in Cuzco, capital of the Inca Empire, 1533. Astronomer Johannes Kepler died, 1630. Politician William Pitt the Elder, Prime Minister of Great Britain [1766-1768], born, 1708. Paleontologist Emma Richter died, 1956. Intel released the 4004, the word's first commercial single-chip microprocessor, 1971. Actress Virginie Ledoyen born, 1976. Day of the Imprisoned Writer.
 
Sunday 16th November
    - Day 320/365
  -   Prince Edward acceded to the English throne while on the Ninth Crusade, 1272. Jeweller, explorer and writer Jean Chardin born, 1643. Notorious criminal Jack Sheppard was hanged, 1724. Fisgard Lighthouse, the first permanent lighthouse on Canada's west coast, shone its first light, 1860. Playwright Bonnie Greer born, 1948. Actress Ann Wedgeworth died, 2017. International Day for Tolerance (UN).
 
Monday 17th November
    - Day 321/365
  -   John Balliol became King of Scotland, 1292. Queen Mary I of England died, 1558. Mathematician and astronomer August Ferdinand Möbius born, 1790. The Suez Canal, linking the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea, was inaugurated, 1869. Actress Sophie Marceau born, 1966. Artist Frank McCarthy died, 2002. World Prematurity Day.
 
Tuesday 18th November
    - Day 322/365
  -   Albert the Bear, first margave of Brandenburg, died, 1170. The St Elizabeth's flood, caused by a breach in a dike, eradicated the Grote Hollandse Waard in Holland and killed about 10,000 people, 1421. Louis Daguerre, artist and pioneering photographer, born, 1787. Susan B. Anthony and fourteen other women were arrested for voting illegally in the US presidential election, 1872. Author Margaret Atwood born, 1939. Singer Sharon Jones died, 2016.
 
Wednesday 19th November
    - Day 323/365
  -   Christopher Columbus went ashore on an island he named San Juan Bautista, now known as Puerto Rico, 1493. King Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland born, 1600. The Man in the Iron Mask died in the Bastille, 1703. Astronauts Pete Conrad and Alan Bean became the third and fourth humans to walk on the Moon, on the Apollo 12 mission, 1969. Writer Elizabeth Taylor died, 1975. Right-to-die activist Brittany Maynard born, 1984. World Toilet Day (UN).
 
Thursday 20th November
    - Day 324/365
  -   Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, conquered Palermo, 1194. Lady Frances Grey, claimant to the English throne, died, 1559. Artist Paulus Potter born, 1625. A sperm whale attacked and sank the whaling ship Essex, an incident that in part inspired Melville's Moby Dick, 1820. Classical pianist Ruth Laredo born, 1937. Filmmaker Robert Altman died, 2006. Transgender Day of Remembrance.


^ THE WISDOM OF...

This week, Susan B. Anthony:
I always distrust people who know so much about what God wants them to do to their fellows, because it always coincides with their own desires.


^ FILM QUIZ

A selection of quotations from films starring Robert De Niro. Answers next issue or from the regular address. Last issue's quotations from films starring Liv Tyler were:


^ WEIRD WORLD NEWS

Strange stories from around the world, some of which might be true...

IN BRIEF: Breaking Rust is at the #1 spot on Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales chart with "Walk My Walk", but you would be forgiven if you have never heard of them. The song (and group) is AI-generated. ● The 2,500-year-old Dun Deardail Scottish hillfort has been rebuilt - in Lego. The model, using about 35,000 bricks, was commissioned by Nevis Landscape Partnership and built by Brick to the Past, a group specialising in creating historically-themed models in Lego, over about eight months. It is on display at the Glen Nevis Visitor Centre. The real Dun Deardail was destroyed in a fire so intense that some of the rampart stones melted. ● Wisbech Town Council in Cambridgeshire has admitted that their Christmas tree is an "absolute disgrace" and ordered a replacement [It is still early November, guys... -Ed] ● The 6,000-seat Olympic Velodrome in London, built for the 2012 Games has been found to have a rather embarassing problem. Every time a firework goes off within earshot the lightweight timber ventilation system apparently reflects it as a sound like a fart... ● A volunteer at the Keelung Museum of Art in Taiwan has inadvertently damaged one of the works of art. The item was a mirror covered in 40 years' worth of dust with a smudge in the middle, symbolising the cultural consciousness of the middle class. Or at least it was, until the volunteer thought it needed cleaning and wiped it down with toilet paper... ● For decades, especially in the wake of The Matrix and its sequels, scientists and theorists have pondered the question of whether we are living in a computer simulation, but a new paper by Mir Faizal and colleagues at the University of British Columbia had argued that the Platonic realm, a conceptual ideal plane beyond the physical world that consists of pure information, cannot describe reality using just computation. ● Residents of Kirkby on Merseyside have reportedly been appalled to see new roadmarkings and signs around the town that spell it as 'Kirby'. National Highways and Sefton Council have promised to correct them. ● Kim Knor recently made her 1,000th parachute jump, in New Wales, Florida, and been awarded the United States Parachute Association's Gold Wings Award. A member of the first US Women's Parachute Team in 1962, Kim is 86. ● In a frankly stunning example of inefficiency, even for the UK government, the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra), has spent £312m ($400m) to modernise its IT systems including replacing tens of thousands of laptops running Windows 7 with ones running Windows 10, which officially reached its end of standard support last month. It is not known if the laptops can be upgraded to Windows 11, which controversially has specific hardware requirements, or whether Defra is paying for extended support. ● Collins Dictionary has chosen "vibe coding" as its word of the year, referring to writing software by describing its function to an AI system rather than manually writing the software, even though the resulting apps usually contain bugs. Runners-up included 'coolcation' (a vacation in a place with a cool climate), 'taskmasking' (giving the false impression of being productive in the workplace) and 'glaze' (to praise or flatter someone excessively and usually undeservedly).


^ OBITUARIES

Journalist and broadcaster Quentin Wilson (Top Gear, Fifth Gear, The Car's the Star, 65), film director Lee Tamahori (Once Were Warriors, Along Came a Spider, Die Another Day, 75), actress Sally Kirkland (The Sting, Anna, JFK, 84), actress Pauline Collins (Shirley Valentine, The Liver Birds, Upstairs Downstairs, 85).


^ DUMBLEDORE BEAR'S LOTTERY PREDICTOR!

Dumbledore Bear, our in-house psychic predicts that the following numbers will be lucky:
3, 7, 30, 33, 44, 50
[UK National Lottery, number range 1-59]
You can get your very own prediction at http://www.simonlamont.co.uk/tfir/dumbledore.htm.


^ AND FINALLY...

    The teacher was handing back the children's homework. "OK, children," she said, "I asked you to write about a sports event you saw with your family last week. Little Mary, that is a very good report of the snooker."
    Little Mary beamed. "Thank you, Miss. My daddy likes snooker and explained it to me while we watched it on TV."
    The teacher continued. "Little Simon, that must have been an exciting horse race."
    "Thank you, Miss. My grandad took me to see it."
    Finally the teacher looked at the last piece of paper. "Little Jennifer, you handed in a blank sheet of paper."
    Little Jennifer smiled as only she could. "Yes, Miss. Mummy and Daddy were taking me to a football game but it was rained off!"


^ ...end of line