Don't try to play minecraft without their fact

Don't try to play minecraft without their fact

Minecraft is the hadr game for some players who don't want to read about factoflife for the game but they want to play immediately. Of course, they can't do it because they don't know what should they do in game, how sad is that. Here my post will show you some funny jokes for minecraft,just read it and you can play game in few minute.
Interesting funny random Minecraft facts
#1
The first version of Minecraft was created in six days back in 2009, when Swedish programmer and designer Markus Persson, widely known as “Notch” to the millions of the game’s fans, decided to create a sandbox game for the launch of his then new company, Mojang AB. However, the full version would be released two years later.
#2
All cows in Minecraft are female, since they can all release milk. However, they can still breed with each other somehow.
#3
If you think it’s bad luck to break glass in the real world, then you don’t want to know what happens in Minecraft when you do it. See, when glass is smashed, the sky behind it turns blue even if there are clouds.
#4
Iron Golems and wolves are the only mobs that can become hostile in peaceful mode. Just as in real life, never trust a hungry wolf, even in the world of Minecraft.
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Iron Golem Minecraft - Minecraft facts
#5
The ender dragon is capable of destroying chests but he can’t destroy minecarts with chests.
#6
And for some reason rain and snow can’t be seen through glass that has been broken.
#7
When the game is paused a hostile enderman will still shake just because they’re weird like that.
#8
Lava pools are pretty common even in the most freezing conditions in Minecraft. That’s why you see them pretty often in taiga and snowy landscapes in the game.
#9
In the real world a cat supposedly has nine lives but in Minecraft it appears to have even more since it suffers no damage whatsoever in falls.
#10
As you’ve noticed, in case you play the gamecreepers might not have hands but they can still climb ladders with ease.
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Minecraft funny memes - Funny facts about Minecraft
#11
If you plant crops in rows with a space between each row the crops grow faster.
#12
Eating has no effect on physical activities in Minecraft. You can still jump as high, ladder travel, and run as fast after you’ve eaten a heavy meal.
#13
If you’ve got a sweet tooth, you have to be really careful because if you break the block beneath the cakes, they will disappear.
#14
When looking at the debug screen (F3), the netherworld is called Hell and the End is called Sky.
#15
You don’t need to know any secret recipes or start a barbeque since in Minecraft if you just light a pig or cow on fire it drops a cooked pork chop or steak.
#16
Spiders are friendly during daytime or in a fully lit room. Further, if you’re starving you can eat spider eggs. In the world of Minecraft they are delicious.
#17
Boats won’t break if they crash into soul sand.
#18
In the world of Minecraft just drinking milk will stop all effects of poison. We wish things were as simple in real life.
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Minecraft creepers - Funny Minecraft facts
#19
If you eat a raw chicken while crouching, you have a smaller chance of getting poisoned.
#20
One in every 10,000 times you play the game, its introductory menu will flash a misspelling of the game’s title, transposing the E and C to read Minceraft.
#21
In 2014 state employees Simon Kokkendorf and Thorbjørn Nielsen of the Danish Geodata Agency completed a scale replica of Denmark within the world-building game to help drive interest in geographic data.
#22
Persson originally wanted to name it “Cave Game.” Thankfully he ended up with Minecraft.
#23
In case you don’t understand what the language of endermans is, the weird sounds thesecreepy things make are the words “Hi,” “Hello,” and “What’s up” reversed, slowed down, and distorted.
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Top 10 interesting facts on filmmaking

Let’s challenge and widen your knowledge with our today article that is about uncommonly known fun facts about filmmaking or top 10 things filmmakers should bear in mind.


1. Filmmaking industry management is dim and dull

If you want to be an “employed” director, you’ll must endure contact with some management types who have all the artistic judgement of a brick. It is absolutely worth it — just steel yourself psychologically for it! Very few directors are above that; every one else has to suck it up.

2. Color is your friend

As a director, you can make your work stand out from the crowd by developing a good mastery over color and design. The Decorista is a great start. You all have some sort of aesthetic sense, even if you don’t consider yourself a designer – you still need to sharpen and strengthen it. It’s fun! Many of filmmakers don’t bother with this, so this investment will help you become the best. Remember not to underestimate the power of eye candy for entertainment.

3. Filmmaking is leadership

There is a common film quote that filmmaking is leadership. You can have amazingly gifted professional actors and crew members work for not much money on your project and have them be grateful to you for the chance. It is charisma; it’s being the kind of leader whom people are glad to follow to Hell and back; it’s coming across as someone who will actually achieve something in life. These are all attributes that you can steadily improve, just like learning an instrument.
When you land paid directing work in future on the strength of the projects that your collaborators helped you build, remember those who believed in you and worked for nothing — give them a tangible demonstration of gratitude by hiring them! The people who helped me all reside in my mind with crystalline clarity. They will not be forgotten.

4. The two most successful filmmakers didn’t go to film school

The two most talented and wildly successful filmmakers in history — Steven Spielberg and James Cameron — did not go to film school and do not recommend going to film school.

5. Wrong question!

I am asked “Which camera should I use?” as much as all other questions put together. I intend to change that. That is the uncommonly known fact that every filmmaker should bear in mind.


6. Freedom for filmmakers

If you have a decent director’s reel and a social/professional network, you can shoot a high-quality feature film with no debt and without depending on tedious decision makers named crowd funding.

7. 35mm lookalike cameras are now common, but skills never will be

Every filmmaker has access to cameras now that were a distant dream just ten years ago. DSLRs give everyone the chance to make footage look like it was shot with a real movie camera — bokeh and all. To stand out in this deluge of 35mm lookalike videos, it play more important role than ever to develop real directing skills — a thing that is and always will be in scarce supply in the film industry, because it takes some innate talent and an awful lot of work. After the mandatory directing and camerawork skills, the next largest return on investment is offered by learning the key fundamentals of film editing.

8. Goodbye, film prints!

The IHS Screen Digest predicts that movie studios will cease to produce film prints for “major markets” by 2013, and for the rest of the world by 2015. At this stage, the decline of celluloid cannot be arrested.

9. Most independent films never see the light of day

The overwhelming majority of independent films never make a profit or see any kind of meaningful distribution. Most independent films are only watched by friends, family and audiences at second-tier film festivals, and finally disappear. With the glut of no-budget films being churned out at unprecedented rates, the number of “orphan movies” is probably bigger than ever – and there are no stats, because these films tend vanish completely and do not leave much in the way of a paper trail.

10. Times are tough for film crews

There are massively talented and experienced film industry workers out there who have shot music videos for A-list pop stars and TV commercials for major brands who now sit at home, scouring Craigslist for low-paid film production gigs.

Check out more news about amazing funny pics, jokes and other film facts on our site.
39 Facts About "The Hunger Games"

39 Facts About "The Hunger Games"

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1. Author Suzanne Collins was trained in sword fighting, but believes if she were really in the Hunger Games, she’d only be scored a 4.

2. The Hunger Games is currently the third-most highlighted Kindle book of all time. The Bible is first.

3. Collins used to be a staff writer for Clarissa Explains It All and The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo. She also wrote for the show Little Bear.

4. When Collins was a child, she was a Greek mythology fanatic.

5. Her original inspiration for The Hunger Games was the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur, which horrified her as a child.

6. The plant that is Katniss’ namesake is also known as “arrowhead.”

7. Katniss’ last name, Everdeen, is a nod to Bathsheba Everdene in Far From the Madding Crowd. Collins says that “the two are very different, but both struggle with knowing their hearts.”

8. Collins got the idea for Katniss’ story when she was channel surfing one night and kept seeing different reality TV shows on some channels, juxtaposed with footage from the Iraq War on others. She said that “these two things began to sort of fuse together in a very unsettling way.”
9. Francis Lawrence, who directed Catching Fire and both Mockingjay films, alsodirected the music videos for Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance,” Beyoncé’s “Run the World (Girls),” and Avril Lavigne’s “Sk8er Boi.”

10. Collins didn’t originally plan to make The Hunger Games a trilogy. When she got to the end of the first book, she knew there had to be a sequel, because she knew Katniss would be punished for almost eating the nightlock berries.
11. Taylor Swift, The Civil Wars, and producer T-Bone Burnett wrote and recorded “Safe and Sound” for The Hunger Games soundtrack in one day.

12. Swift re-read the first book after writing the song to see where in the story the song would fit in. The Civil Wars said they think the song can be applied to four different relationships in the book.

13. While on set, Jennifer Lawrence told Josh Hutcherson she could kick all the way over his head, but when she tried, she accidentally kicked him in the head and gave him a concussion.

14. After reading the trilogy, Donald Sutherland sent a three-page email to director Gary Ross about his perception of President Snow. He titled it “Letters from the Rose Garden” and said he felt the three most vital elements about Snow would be his smile, his eyes, and his roses.

15. Danny Strong, who played Jonathan Levinson on Buffy the Vampire Slayer,penned the scripts for both the Mockingjay films.

16. When Collins was 6 years old, her father fought in the Vietnam War. She saidthat her father felt “it was his responsibility to make sure that all his children had an understanding about war, about its cost, its consequences,” and that’s “the heart of” The Hunger Games.

17. The first Hunger Games movie was banned in Vietnam.

18. Collins said that the hardest part of the books to write were “the deaths…and the violence between the young characters.”

19. On the last day of training for the first film, Jennifer Lawrence ran full-speed into a wall. Her trainer was afraid she had burst her spleen and she had to get a CAT scan.

20. Philip Seymour Hoffman, who played Plutarch Heavensbee, had eight to ten days left of filming for Mockingjay when he passed away. He didn’t have any dialogue in the remaining scenes, and the character will not be re-created using CGI.

21. Paula Malcomson, who plays Katniss’ mother, also played Jennifer Lawrence’s mother in a 2007 episode of Cold Case.
22. Collins read survival books and used her father’s knowledge of foraging and hunting when she wrote the books. Her father grew up during the Great Depression, and his family depended on hunting and foraging to survive.

23. Many fans believe the Capitol in the books is located where Denver, Colorado, is now.

24. Elizabeth Banks said that the hardest part of wearing Effie’s elaborate costumes was the nails. She couldn’t use the bathroom without having someone help her unzip her costume and hand her toilet paper.

25. Banks’ favorite Effie costume is the monarch butterfly outfit she wears at the reaping in Catching Fire. It’s made of feathers that were hand-painted to look like butterflies.

26. Jennifer Lawrence’s favorite Katniss costume is the gold dress she wears during the Tribute Parade in Catching Fire.
27. “Panem” is derived from the Roman expression “panem et circenses,” which translates to “bread and circuses.”

28. There was a swear jar on set for the first film, and director Gary Ross estimated Lawrence contributed to about half the total.

29. As a child, Lawrence’s nickname was “Plays With Fire.” When she was older, her parents told her it was because they had decided not to have any more children when she came along, and “they got burned.”

30. Lawrence went deaf in one ear for a week during filming for Catching Fire. She had to dive into stagnant water for a stunt and got a double ear infection, then caught a water jet in the same ear during filming.

31. For the first film, the costuming team had to make 1,800 costumes to dress the Capitol extras. Many of the costumes were handmade.

32. There were 35 full-time makeup artists and 450 wigs on set for the first film.

33. Katniss’ signature braid took only 20 minutes to style.
34. Woody Harrelson based Haymitch’s hairstyle on his brother Brett’s.

35. Actress Kristen Bell wanted the role of Johanna Mason.
36. Jacqueline Emerson, who plays Foxface in the first film, accidentally gave herself a black eye during training. She wasn’t allowed to tell anyone she’d been cast in the film so she had to lie to her friends at school about how she got it.

37. The Hunger Games has been translated in 51 different languages.
38. Collins sat in on Josh Hutcherson’s audition and said that “three lines into the read [she] knew he’d be fantastic.”

39. Ultimately, Collins hopes people who read or watch the series will askthemselves “questions about how elements of the book might be relevant in their own lives,” like not taking your next meal for granted and being politically aware.
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How White Walkers - Game of Thrones are made

Game of Thrones is an American fantasy drama television series. Game of Thrones has attracted record numbers of viewers on HBO and attained an exceptionally broad and active international fan base.


And we all know that in Game of Thrones, White Walkers King, a fictional humanoid creature, have their sights set on destruction. However, how are they created? How people can create them with such a mummy-like appearance? Let's watch this video to find out.
Interesting and funny facts:

It takes a team of around a dozen people to make the hit HBO show’s much-reviled characters, with each requiring the costume and makeup team to devote about a month to each White Walker.

The teams finally utilize clay molds to transform the icy humanoids’ characters, with these molds taking around three hours to apply to the actors’ bodies. It’s worth it, though: the blue-eyed demons are hella scary.


Interesting and crazy facts about Walt Disney

Walt Disney is probably the leader in the American animation field. Disney has released many famous cartoon films and movies such as Mickey Mouse, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, The Lion King, Pinocchio, Inside Out, etc. Its most famous and popular cartoon character is Mickey Mouse. Walt Disney has attracted people of all ages by its magic. Disneyland and Walt Disney Theme Parks are also the dream world of many children. Let’s find out crazy and interesting facts about Walt Disney.


Fact #1:  Wall- E was actually named after Walter Elias Disney

Everyone’s beloved rubbish compacting robot Wall-E was actually named after Walter Elias Disney

Fact #2: Yen Sid spells “Disney” backwards

Yen Sid is the powerful sorcerer of Mickey Mouse in Fantasia. He appeared as an old man with a really long beard and robes extending to the floor. Clever Walt Disney fans figured out that Yen Sid is actually DISNEY spelled backward

Fact #3:  Walt Disney’s famous dying words were “Kurt Russell”

Before dying, Walt Disney grabbed a piece of paper and scribbled the words “Kurt Russell”. Why he did  that still remains a mystery until now. And even Kurt Russell, who was a child start of 15 at that time, has no idea.

Fact #4:  Walt Disney drove a field ambulance in World War I

In the World War 1, Walter Disney wanted to enroll in the military. However, he was declined as he was too young. So Walter Disney decided to drive a field ambulance during this war.

Fact #5: Disney productions used to be sued by a biologist

After the famous animated epic musical movie The Lion King was released, a biologist sued the Disney Productions for portraying hyenas as villains

Fact #6 : The names of the main characters of Frozen sound out “Hans Christian Anderson”

Since Frozen was produced based on The Snow Queen, an original fairy tale by Hans Christian Anderson, Disney paid tribute to the author by naming the main characters of Frozen so that their names when spoken quickly sound like “Hans Christian Anderson”.  You can try this yourself: “Hans, Kristof, Anna, and Sven”

Fact  #7. Disneyland was the product of Walter Disney boredom.

The idea of building an amusement park for children and adults came up to the mind of Walter Disney when he sat on a bench and watched his children riding a merry-go-round in Los Angeles’ Griffith Park. At that moment, he wished there were a place for both children and adults to enjoy together. That park bench is currently on display in Disneyland’s Opera House.

Fact #8:  Pocahontas never got her pet turkey

Pocahontas was initially supposed to have a pet talking turkey called Readfeather . This pet talking turkey was going to be voiced by John Candy. However, Readfeather character had to be dropped due to the death of Candy in 1994.

Fact #9:  Tangled was more expensive than Avatar

Believe it or not, Tangled is Disney’s most expensive animated films. Its budget stood at $260 million. And Avatar’s budget was $237 m.

Fact #10:  Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs has brought to Walt Disney 8 Academy Awards

At the 11th Academy Awards, when Walt Disney got his Oscar for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, it was presented to him as one large Oscar and seven miniature ones attached.

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