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About Me
editHi! I'm Broadwaygenius and I am most certainly not a Broadway Genius. I joined Wikipedia in 2017, but have really gotten into editing since June 2018. I became a pending changes reviewer in June 2018.
Pending changes backlog
(review log)
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2 pages according to DatBot 03:45, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
Vandalism information |
Vandalism level 4: Low to moderate level of vandalism |
[edit] |
3.22 RPM according to EnterpriseyBot 23:10, 11 January 2025 (UTC) |
News
editIn The News
edit- Joseph Aoun (pictured) is elected president of Lebanon after a two-year vacancy.
- A series of wildfires in Southern California, United States, leaves at least 11 people dead and forces the evacuation of nearly 180,000 others.
- A 7.1-magnitude earthquake hits Tingri County in the Tibet Autonomous Region, China, leaving at least 126 people dead.
- Indonesia becomes a full member of BRICS.
Did You Know?
edit- ... that Adrien Nunez (pictured), despite limited playing time, was more highly paid than some NBA draft lottery picks while in college?
- ... that specimens of Aquilegia daingolica were collected in 1906 and 1909, but it was first described as a new species in 2013?
- ... that Yanou Collart helped Rock Hudson get medical treatment when Nancy Reagan would not?
- ... that when Alexander McQueen, following years of criticism for over-reliance on runway spectacles, presented The Man Who Knew Too Much, it was criticised for its lack of theatrics?
- ... that Lars Chemnitz was one of the first recipients of Nersornaat, the highest honor in Greenland?
- ... that the principal songwriter of a song on Always Happy to Explode asked listeners to "love it for me, for I cannot"?
- ... that Daniel Hermann wrote poems on the inclusion of a lizard and a frog in a piece of amber, the eagle in the coat of arms of Poland, and a child suffering from Fraser syndrome?
- ... that the harsh treatment of Allied prisoners of war in Japan is well known in the West but mostly ignored or glossed over in Japan itself?
- ... that a cable TV channel in the UK was still broadcasting primarily in black and white as late as 1979?