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13 THINGS YOU GENUINELY NEVER KNEW ABOUT.....
MARS
The
space planet Mars has taken its punches over the years. Somehow, as far as
Hollywood is concerned, it's never the little purple men from Saturn who
invade Earth - it's always the green men from Mars.
The movie Mission To
Mars – was released on Friday 14th April in the UK – is another
poke in the eye for the Martian tourist board, with its special effects
and myths about spooky humanoid faces carved on to the surface of the
planet, and that. It seemed as good a time as any to inform, educate and
BRAINWASH ALL EARTHLINGS ABOUT THE SUPERIOR PLANET. ALL HUMANS MUST ABSORB
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION ABOUT THE PLANET MARS TO PREPARE THEM FOR THE
FORTHCOMING INVASION. And so on.
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The
planet Mars is named after the Roman god of war. But before Mars
became associated with killing and pillaging he was an agricultural
god interested only in ploughing and scattering. Blame the Greek
influence - their god Ares needed an equivalent in Italy, so a group
of influential Roman philosophers, probably pissed on the good red
wine they kept away from the plebs, gave Mars the job. Mars bars may
have been named after the god of war too, but only because of the game
soldiers play with them when in their barracks together - lights out
at 10/Mars bars out at 11.
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The
first spacecraft to visit Mars was Mariner 4 in 1965. Others since
then have included the originally-named Mars 2, then the Vikings in
1976, and the Pathfinder in 1997. The Vikings' mission was to
determine if there was, or had ever been, life on Mars. The results
were ambiguous, but most scientists agree there have never been any
living things on the planet. Though X-Files fans would be the first to
point out only two samples were taken, and not from the most
favourable locations. They would probably also quote OJ
Simpson-starring conspiracy movie Capricorn One as more proof, the
optimistic, romantic, deluded fools
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For
all its potential for terraforming, Mars is hardly a "space
Ibiza". Temperatures vary from a pleasant enough 27C (80F) on the
dayside of the planet in summer to -133C (-207F) in winter. The
average is a decidedly not "shorts weather" 55C (-67F). And
while there was once water on the surface, there hasn't been any thing
to splash around and impress foreign women in for four billion years.
And there's probably only one nightclub, and it's probably rank, and
full of fucking space wankers, trying to pull all the least-minging
space birds.
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Surprisingly,
Earth and Mars and pretty similar in a lot of ways. Both planets used
almost all of their carbon dioxide to form rocks when taking shape,
but unlike the Earth, Mars lacked the ability to recycle the Co2 back
into the atmosphere; not enough Co2, and not enough of a greenhouse
effect to raise the planet's temperature. The pressure on Mars is less
than 1% of Earth’s, but this is enough to produce winds and dust
storms that can cover the planet for months. The land surface area of
the two planets is almost the same, despite Earth being bigger.
That’s just stupid.
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On
August 6, 1996, scientist David McKay announced the first
identification of organic compounds from a Martian meteorite. He
claimed the compounds, along with other rock samples, may contain
evidence of Martian micro-organisms - and therefore, Martian life.
Still, fear not. It would take billions of micro-organisms to even
lift a Martian raygun, let alone aim it and pull the trigger.
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Gulliver's
Travels author Jonathan Swift referred to Mars' two moons in his most
famous book, written in 1726. Amazingly, the two moons were not
discovered until 1877 and fitted exactly with the patterns of orbit
described by Swift - so either it was just a lucky coincidence, or
Swift was a Martian. Or he knew of famous physicist Kepler's blind
assumption that, because Venus has no moons and Earth has one, Mars
must have two. And even more stupidly (given the excellence of
hindsight) he thought Kepler must be right.
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The
origins of Martians as little green men probably came from Tarzan
creator Edgar Rice Burroughs' book A Princess On Mars (1917). He
refers to the "green men of Mars" in this first book of his
Martian Tales series of 11 novels. The Oxford English Dictionary says
Rudyard Kipling is responsible for the term "little green
men", having used it in Puck Of Pook Hill (1906), though the
green men Kipling referred to were human men tattooed green, and not
sadistic killers hellbent on invading Earth.
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Recent
movies to visit Mars include Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks! (1996), with
its visions of maniacal killers with guns enslaving, killing and
experimenting on humans. Their weakness was yodelling, which was
really stupid. Total Recall had a few scientific flaws with its
depiction of the Red Planet, but to be fair it was the movie which
kick-started the career of Sharon Stone. The finale saw Arnold
Schwarzenegger liberate the atmostpheric gases and water from beneath
the planet's surface. Should Arnie ever find himself on Mars in a
real-life situation, he shouldn't hold his breath waiting to find
them. Then again, as he wouldn't be able to breathe, maybe he should.
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Older
movies about Mars are among the worst ever. Planet Of Blood (1966) saw
Dennis Hopper and Basil Rathbone rescue an alien from a crashed ship
on the surface - only to have her recover and kill them all. Mars
Needs Women (1966) saw Yvonne "Batgirl" Craig as the
scientist chosen by invading Martians as one of the females in the
title. And they didn't need her just to do the washing up neither.
Batman himself, Adam West, also featured in a Martian movie of his
own. He co-starred in Robinson Crusoe On Mars (1964), which saw a lone
man and his pet monkey stranded on the planet. In 1954, it was the
males who were in danger, in Devil Girl From Mars. A leather-clad
Patricia Laffa came to Earth with a robot pal to capture Earthmen and
take them back home to mate with them. She was pretty tasty, so she
probably would have had fair results by just posting a lonely-hearts
advert rather than killing and maiming her way to a shagfest. Santa
Claus Conquers The Martians (1964) saw Saint Nick himself teach the
meanie Martians the true meaning of Christmas, and concluded with the
little green men singing "We love you, Santy Claus".
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But
not all Martian films are rubbish. The War Of The Worlds, based –
loosely – upon the HG Wells story which famously caused all of
America crap its pants thanks to Orson Welles' radioplay broadcast in
1938, won an Oscar for special effects. Well known as a thinly-vieled
propaganda film against Cold War Soviets, the Ruskis too used The Red
Planet (oh-ho!) for their brainwashing purposes. In the 1924 film
Aelita: Queen Of Mars, engineer Los - an enemy of the people - builds
a spaceship, kills his care worker wife and flees into space to marry
Aelita, ruler of capitalistic Mars. But then he wakes up and it's all
a dream - and the audience probably felt cheated even then.
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Contrary
to popular opinion, the Mars bar is not a gin joint for thirsty
aliens, but a popular chocolate snack available in over one hundred
countries throughout five continents. However, for some stupid reason,
the Mars bar is known in America as a Milky Way, while what British
consumers know as a Milky Way bar is known in America as a Three
Musketeers bar. Mars Incorporated was started by Frank C. Mars – a
human candy salesman – and his human wife, Mrs Frank. Together they
started a candy-making business from the kitchen of their home in
Tacoma, Washington, in 1911. European operations began in 1932, under
the watchful eye of Forrest E. Mars Sr., in Slough, England. Forrest
pioneered M&Ms chocolate chips, and also sold pet food products
through Mars UK. Nowadays, as well as dog food, Mars make Tunes throat
sweets, pizzas, and Uncle Ben’s rice. We used to know a guy who
worked at Mars, and he said all the employees used to get given
prototype chocolate bars to try out, and one time he was given a white
chocolate Mars bar that never came to the market, and another time he
was at work and he done poo poo in the toilet but there weren’t no
toilet paper in there and he had to go into the next cubicle, and as
he was walking from one to another with his pants round his buttocks
some guy walked in and asked “What’s going on?” And also, Mars
bars used to come in these black, waxy paper wrappers that you could
tear up and put on your teeth and make it look like you had teeth
missing, but they’ve changed the wrapper now.
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One
– possibly apocryphal – rock legend tells how, during a 1967
police raid upon Rolling Stone Keith Richard’s Redlands estate,
police burst into a bedroom expecting to find drugs, but instead found
Mick Jagger eating a Mars Bar, while it was partially inserted into
the delightful minge of celebrity groupie Marianne Faithful. However,
in her autobiography, Faithful denied it ever happened, claiming that
the police had invented the whole sordid incident, saying: “It's a
dirty old man's fantasy. A cop's idea of what people do on acid.”
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Also,
though there’s no way either of these tales are true of course,
Richard Gere had to go to hospital to have a gerbil removed from his
anus, and former Soft Cell singer Marc Almond had to have TEN PINTS of
dog semen pumped from his stomach. Except, of course, that’s not
even tenuously related to Mars.
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