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1 fiction conversations over 22 days (Apr 12, 2023 – May 4, 2023) 100% prompt uniqueness Washington, United States
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Apr 12, 2023
May 4, 2023
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1 conversation in cluster Cluster 1× “give me a list of funny ridiculous historical events which a...” over less than a minute (Apr 12, 2023 – Apr 12, 2023), oldest first. Show: 10 15 50 100
Apr 12, 2023 at 2:51 PM PDT — 1 turn United States, Washington fiction toxic View full conversation
USER: give me a list of funny ridiculous historical events which are fictional but sound real
CHATBOT: 1. The Great Emu Caper (1876): A group of Australian outlaws released a herd of emus in the middle of a posh tennis tournament, leading to total chaos and widespread laughter. 2. The Amsterdam Tulip War (1638): A showdown between two competing tulip vendors in 17th century Amsterdam escalated into a full-blown street battle, using tulips as weapons. 3. Cow-Tipping Rebellion (1820): Farmers from the English countryside threw off the chains of feudal injustice by toppling their livestock, leading to a domino effect lasting for weeks. 4. The Whipped Cream Incident of Versailles (1738): King Louis XV ordered his chefs to create a life-sized whipped cream sculpture of him in the palace gardens; unfortunately, it melted before he could admire it, leaving only a sticky mess behind. 5. The Pancake Rebellion (1904): Swedish townspeople tired of eating only pancakes for a month staged a defiant protest - with eggs and bacon. 6. The Rubber Band War (1896): British and German companies raced to develop more efficient rubber band production, leading to a series of dramatic duels and espionage between the two sides. 7. The Royal Underwear Crisis (1624): King Charles I's laundry was accidentally switched with a commoner's laundry, causing scandal and gossip about the King's undergarments for weeks. 8. The Spanish Potato Dance Craze (1885): A dance involving participants hurling potatoes at each other took Spain by storm in the late 19th century. 9. The Great Carrot Heist (1911): Over one million carrots were stolen from a Moscow warehouse, leading to an extensive (and ultimately fruitless) investigation by the Russian police. 10. The Colossal Sneeze (1863): A strong gust of wind in a busy London marketplace caused an unfortunate chain reaction, resulting in the largest recorded multiple-sneeze event in history.