![]() ![]() On his Late Show, David Letterman featured a recurring segment called Fun Facts. A few years later fun facts made their way into the classroom, when a professional magazine for teachers proposed an activity where students come up with their own fun facts. The first couple facts in each ad were proper fun facts, while the last, once they had your attention, was a fact about Wrigley gum. A number of these fun facts were collected in a 1973 book. Wrigley used fun facts in newspaper ads for its chewing gum. ![]() ![]() The current use of fun fact for a little nugget of knowledge comes about by the 1970s. In the 1850s, there was a newspaper column titled “Fun, Fact, and Fancy,” a sort of Twitter Moments of its day. By 1860, there was an entire paper titled Fun, Fact, and Fancy dedicated to these accounts. Though school kids might think of fun and fact as natural enemies, the two have appeared together since the nineteenth century. ![]()
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