New York (AP) – Win the youngest driver title and win Formula One World Championship It’s really difficult. Or, it has the greatest bounty of Mount Everest. But are most soda cans crushed quickly with your feet?
Guinness World Records Celebrating the 70th anniversary by providing regular people with a way to enter a list of famous achievements. Create online quiz to provide unclaimed potential titles and help readers match personality types to possible records.
Do you stay calm and pace yourself? Or about getting it done right away? Answers to 5 questions like online lead to trying the World Records option – Just as most eggs were stacked in one minute or farthest distance bottle flips.
there is A list of 70 unsolicited titles, Like the fastest time to make a burrito, the longest marathon playing the air guitar, and most anchovies that are ready to eat. They are sorted by headlines as speed, power, accuracy, passion, patience, one for under 16 years old, and the other for friends and pets, as cats caught in 1 minute.
“We all think that we are just amazing in our own way, discovering what it is and celebrating it,” says editor-in-chief Craig Glenday. “I want to see kids in the same book Usain Bolt. ”
It started with a pub conflict
In 2023, Sano Kiyoshi, an 89-year-old Japanese man, was recognized by the Guinness World Records as the oldest man in surfing. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
The annual book, first published in 1955, was originally devised to resolve pub discussions, but has evolved into an international phenomenon, selling 155 million copies in over 40 languages. The publication itself is listed as the world’s most bestselling copyrighted book.
It started when Irrig Hubiber, then the managing director of Guinness Brewery, was invited to Gamebird Hunting in Ireland. He and his companions soon began to fight, and it was Europe’s fastest game bird. There was no quick way to resolve the dispute.
Beaver dreamed of a pamphlet that could be sold to pubs along with Guinness Stout barrels. He asked the fact-discovered researchers, Norris and Ross McWilter, to put together something different from the encyclopedia of a dry, highly academic day.
Glenday has been in charge of books since its 50th anniversary, democratizing recordkeeping, with the most sweaters wearing and the biggest belp-like entries open. He believes that striving for goals is essentially human.
“For everyone, the more open and free we all benefit collectively, the more we all get, the more “There’s a cake we can eat, and not all of it is gone. You can add and keep adding.”
“Officially surprising”
Julio Mora Tapia, 110, and Waldramina Quinteros, 104, retired teachers will pos for photos at their home in Kito, Ecuador in 2020. The couple is recognized as the oldest couple in the world by the Guinness World Records. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)
The Guinness World Records accepts all kinds of achievements, unlike the Olympics, which determines what is the right sport and what is not the right sport. “If not, it’s official, but that’s not surprising. And we have to be officially surprising,” he says.
The Guinness World Records jumped pogosticks through 1,899 stages of CN Tower in Ontario, Canada, where you find Ashlita Furman in New York City.
“He’s a real athlete,” says Glenday. “Who else is celebrating these people, acknowledging them, and verifying their amazingness? No one is except us.
For critics who say that Glenday is making a mistake by promoting a male high jump world record holder on the same page as the fastest person, using his nose to push an orange for a mile a mile, he disagrees. Both require focus, training and dedication.
“To me, it’s the same discipline, the same way of thinking. To think one is more impressive than the others, it’s just that society is kind of programmed.”