Thursday 2 August 2012

GB Olympics medal history

I was trying to find out how team GB had fared in previous olympics, and couldn't find that in a simple list - so here we are - Thanks to Wikipedia for each line..

When Gold Silver Bronze Total Position Where
2012




London
2008 19 13 15 47 4 Beijing
2004 9 9 12 30 10 Athens
2000 11 10 7 28 10 Sydney
1996 1 8 6 15 36 Atlanta
1992 5 3 12 20 13 Barcelona
1988 5 10 9 24 12 Seoul
1984 5 11 21 37 11 Los Angeles
1980 5 7 9 21 9 Moscow
1976 3 5 5 13 13 Montreal
1972 4 5 9 18 12 Munich
1968 5 5 3 13 10 Mexico City
1964 4 12 2 18 10 Tokyo
1960 2 6 12 20 12 Rome
1956 6 7 11 24 8 Melbourne
1952 1 2 8 11 18 Helsinki
1948 3 14 6 23 12 London



Friday 8 June 2012

Oldest Bottle of Wine

Random discussion - which (and where) is the worlds oldest bottle of wine. This seems to be difficult to find out. The most obvious contender is a bottle of wine which was buried with a Roman noble.

After that, its more difficult. There would appear to be some wines from before 1700 which are still drinkable and still in their cask/barrels. I'm not sure if wine drawn from these casks and then bottled counts. There seem to be several different bottled contenders from the 1770's and beyond. I've not listed anything after 1800.


Year Where Which wine
350 Pfalz Historical Musuem Germany Buried with a Roman noble
1472 La Cave Historique des Hospices de Strasbourg  Strasbourg Still in barrel
1653 Town hall, Bremen Germany Still in cask
1727 Graycliff Hotel Bahamas Rudesheimer Apostelwein from Bremen Ratsfeller. Bottled in 1950s
1775 ?? ?? Massandra
1787 ?? ?? Château d’Yquem
1787 former U.S President, Thomas Jefferson  ?? Chateau Lafite
1787 ?? ?? Chateau Margaux
1788 Baltic Seabed, Aland Aland, Finland Clicquot, Juglar, Heidsieck Champagne

An assortment of links for these:

http://www.museum.speyer.de/English/Permanent_exhibitions/Weinmuseum_The_Wine_Museum_.htm
http://www.strasbourg.info/sights/wine-cellar/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town_Hall_of_Bremen
http://www.finestandrarest.com/german.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-10673322

Tuesday 27 March 2012

Million plus cities

I was looking at a historical atlas the other day which gave a map of the world with cities over 1million population. It is commonly held that London was the first city to get to 1million, however this would not appear to be true. This post tries to find the order which cities reached 1milion population up to 1900.

My take on this is:

City Year 
Beijing 1775
London 1800
Paris 1835
Manchester 1850
Wuhan 1850
New York 1870
Vienna 1875
Berlin 1875
St Petersburg 1875
Shanghai 1880
Tokyo 1885
Chicago 1890
Philadelphia 1890
Moscow 1897
Istanbul 1900


There's a raft of contradictory information out there - initial sources are:
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0027/twps0027.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_urban_community_sizes
https://faculty.washington.edu/modelski/WcitiesH.htm
http://www.odi.org.uk/events/docs/1125.pdf

http://geography.about.com/library/weekly/aa011201a.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_cities_throughout_history


It would seem also that there may have been cities greater than 1 million earlier, but the lack of census makes these estimates.

Potentially populations over 1 million (which were then not over 1 million by 1900):

Alexandria - 100BC
Rome - 0AD to 300 AD
Chang'an 700AD to 800 AD
Baghdad 925AD to 1200AD
Kaifeng 1200AD
Hangzhou 1200AD
Nanjing 1400AD

p.s. a proper list here that I've had to make myself, rather than find one that someone else has done and repeat. Hooray!

Thursday 16 February 2012

Adverts on TV

I was watching Have I Got News For You on Dave the other day, and was frustrated by the frequency of adverts, which of course, you don't get on the BBC. This led me to wonder if the BBC is unique in its lack of adverts....

Of course, this turns out to be a complicated question. There are adverts and there are adverts - one where you get "commercial breaks" - which is what I had in mind with this question, and the other where there are product placements, "sponsorships" etc. etc. allowing programmes to be provided without commercial breaks. Therefore, I could re-phrase my question - are there any other channels without commercial breaks?

It also turns out that there are a lot of TV channels around the world, and it doesn't seem to be easy to find out if there are commercial breaks or not, and there appear to be plenty of subscription channels which are advert free. Perhaps my question should be -  are there any other free-to-air channels without commercial breaks?

Of course, this post seems to be turning into a list of questions rather than a list which answers a question. A first stab gives this list:


Country Channels
UK BBC
Denmark DR
US PBS
Australia ABC


I'll come back to this another time and see if I can find out more. Couple of useful links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_advertisement
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20111101063033AAVP6Ke

Sunday 15 January 2012

Longest Career - UK Entertainer

I was watching the telly over Christmas and heard the joke: Question - how does Brucie keep looking so young? Answer - He doesn't. I know Brucie has been around for a few years, and I thought I'd see if I could find out who has the longest career as an entertainer in the UK.

General caveats - I'm excluding musicians and writers to begin with, and focusing on TV and Radio. I'm also trying to exclude "one offs" at the tail end of careers.


Who Start Programme Finish Programme Years
Bruce Forsyth 1939 Come and be Televised 2011 Strictly Come Dancing 72
David Attenborough 1954 Zoo Quest 2011 Frozen Planet 57
Rolf Harris 1953 Jigsaw 2010 Jamie's Dream School 57
Patrick Moore 1957 The Sky at Night 2012 The Sky at Night 55
Nicholas Parsons 1957 The Arthur Haynes Show 2012 Just a Minute 55
Ronnie Corbett 1957 Sheep's Clothing 2011 Ronnie Corbetts Comedy Britain 54
William Roache 1960 Coronation Street 2012 Coronation Street 52
David Dimbleby 1962 Top of the form 2012 Question Time 50



My conclusion would seem to be that Bruce Forsyth does have the longest entertainment career, unless anyone else knows better - happy to take suggestions, or indeed for anyone else with a 50+ year career. Data sources - Wikipedia, BBC, IMDB, Radio Times, BFI Screenonline web sites.

Note - Bruce Forsyth was not on TV between 1939 and 1958, when he hosted Sunday Night at the London Palladium. giving him 53 years on TV, which might make me prefer to put Rolf Harris or David Attenborough at the top of the table.

Edit - 21st Jan 12 - David Frost started 1962 TWTWTW.