A list of 43 words by uselessness.
- newspaperswas added by uselessness and appears on 3 lists
- magazineswas added by uselessness and appears on 7 lists
- gramophonewas added by uselessness and appears on 22 lists
- accordionswas added by uselessness and appears on 5 lists
- bugleswas added by uselessness and appears on 4 lists
- violinswas added by uselessness and appears on 3 lists
- banjoswas added by uselessness and appears on 6 lists
- organswas added by uselessness and appears on 10 lists
- clavichordwas added by uselessness and appears on 22 lists
- pianoswas added by uselessness and appears on 4 lists
- clockswas added by uselessness and appears on 16 lists
- fabricwas added by uselessness and appears on 31 lists
- silkwas added by uselessness and appears on 74 lists
- tapestrieswas added by uselessness and appears on 4 lists
- flagswas added by uselessness and appears on 7 lists
- model t chassiswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- lampshadewas added by uselessness and appears on 12 lists
- catswas added by uselessness and appears on 16 lists
- human organswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- bookswas added by uselessness and appears on 53 lists
- children's furniturewas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- checkerboardwas added by uselessness and appears on 9 lists
- kerosene stovewas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- bed springswas added by uselessness and appears on 2 lists
- hope chestswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- plaster bustswas added by uselessness and appears on 2 lists
- pin-up photoswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- portraitswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- dressmaking dummieswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- sawhorsewas added by uselessness and appears on 11 lists
- folding top of a horse-drawn carriagewas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- camera equipmentwas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- bowling ballswas added by uselessness and appears on 3 lists
- chandelierswas added by uselessness and appears on 6 lists
- gunswas added by uselessness and appears on 17 lists
- potato peelerswas added by uselessness and appears on 3 lists
- foodwas added by uselessness and appears on 74 lists
- bicycleswas added by uselessness and appears on 4 lists
- umbrellaswas added by uselessness and appears on 2 lists
- rakeswas added by uselessness and appears on 4 lists
- doll carriagewas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- baby carriageswas added by uselessness and appears on just this list
- ropewas added by uselessness and appears on 38 lists
reesetee commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Fascinating, uselessness.
Note to self: CLEAN HOUSE.
January 21, 2008
minerva commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
I just read about these brothers yesterday. If only you could list newspapers more than once.
January 21, 2008
reesetee commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Haha!
January 21, 2008
chained_bear commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
I had never heard this particular story before. What a great list idea... and creepy, too. Thanks for posting, u!
January 21, 2008
sionnach commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
This is why I no longer get home delivery of the New York Times. My father was a newspaper hoarder all of his life. A couple of years ago, my friends Michael and June stopped by for coffee. At the time, June was completing a rotation in geriatrics. While Michael was in the bathroom, she glanced around the apartment and proceeded to ask me, in the most concerned tone imaginable, whether I knew that one key marker used by social workers to gauge the functional status of their patients was the height of the stacks of newspapers and magazines in the home.
Within 20 minutes of their leaving, there wasn't a paper or magazine left in my home.
Of course, this was just a temporary, panic-induced improvement. The fact remains, it is very difficult for me to throw out that pile of Entertainment Weekly's from 2003. I mean, what if I needed to refresh myself on the details of the whole Dixie Chicks brouhaha?
January 21, 2008
trivet commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
eeesh.
January 21, 2008
reesetee commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Wait...human organs??
January 21, 2008
trivet commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
In jars, I hope.
January 22, 2008
yarb commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Excellent list; I bet it could be much longer with a bit of research. And minerva's right, the single entry "newspapers" is hopelessly inadequate.
n.b. Yes trivet, it would be quite unseemly to keep organs anywhere but in jars.
January 22, 2008
uselessness commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Thanks, all. I just copied the list from Wikipedia, so it's possible there was other crazy stuff in there that didn't get tallied. Or that somebody decided to be a joker and sneak "human organs" in there. Who knows? ;-)
I myself have felt remorse at getting rid of old periodicals. When I was a kid I accumulated quite an archive of Highlights for Children magazines and it tore my heart out when Mom and Dad told me the whole lot had to go. Nevermind that I was well into my teens and hadn't looked at them in years... but you can't argue with sentimentality. Nowadays I look at my parents and thank them for saving me from becoming another Collyer brother. :-P
January 22, 2008
reesetee commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
Really, I wouldn't be too surprised at the presence of jarred human organs (not stunned ones--ones in jars), come to think of it. When I worked in rare books, we'd often buy medical collections (of books) from estates, and in some cases they would include quite a few...er...non-book items. For a while, I had on my desk a preserved slice of the brain of Charles J. Guiteau, assassin of U.S. president James Garfield. It may have made its way to the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, since there's one there now. :-)
Which reminds me--chained_bear, didn't we talk about making lists of the oddest things we've ever had on our desks at work? Off I go....
January 22, 2008
ruzuzu commented on the list from-the-estate-of-the-brothers-collyer
According to an article from the NYTimes, "Although some of the artifacts recovered, like musical instruments, were determined to be fakes, a two-headed baby in a jar of formaldehyde found in the house was actually real."
December 10, 2009