Do turbo mode. wait for the second song (Shift+click the flag) Music: DJ Nate and Knife Party see that pen-nado thing in the back there... Yeah that was by the amazing @-Nova- check him out! everything else is by yours truly THIS MEANS SO MUCH TO ME GUYS!!! THANKS FOR ALL YOUR SUPPORT! facts about 200 A quarter of the world’s wealth is controlled by just 200 companies. Two hundred miles a day was the average daily distance covered by the Pony Express, the United States’ first east-west mail service. Each dandelion flower head produces 200 seeds. Two hundred Japanese executives die on the golf course each year. 200 monks Jean-Antoine Nollet (1700-1770), the Abbot of the Grand Convent of the Carthusians in Paris, was also the first professor of physics at the University of Paris. His particular scientific obsession was electricity and he was able to combine his two professions in a huge experiment by arranging 200 monks into a circle, each of them linked by a metal bar. He then ran an electric current through the circle. The monks’ near-simultaneous reaction demonstrated the high speed at which electricity moved. 200AD The Roman Emperor at the time was Septimius Severus, the first Roman emperor to have been born in Africa. Although he was of Phoenician rather than black African descent, he was reported as having dark skin, and never lost his African accent. He died in York, 11 years later. Born in the same year was the Greek mathematician Diophantus of Alexandria. A pioneer of algebra, he was the first to formulate the apparently insoluble proposition that became known as Fermat’s Last Theorem, after the French mathematician Pierre de Fermat noticed it in 1637. Elsewhere in the world, the Japanese sent a huge fleet to invade Korea, who immediately capitulated, and the “classical” period of Mayan civilization began in Central America. The world’s human population is estimated to have been 257 million – less than the current population of the US (311 million). 200 years ago In 1811 the French admiral Louis-Antoine de Bougainville died, aged 81. In 1769 he had become the first Frenchman to circumnavigate the globe and the first person to do so accompanied by naturalists and geographers. One of these scientists, the botanist Philibert Commerçon, named the South American shrub bougainvillea after his captain. He also smuggled his mistress Jeanne Baré on to the ship by pretending she was his valet. Although later unmasked, she became the first woman to circumnavigate the globe. De Bougainville’s mission was counted a success – he only suffered seven casualties in three years. His account of his travels caused a sensation when published in 1771, mostly as a result of his descriptions of Tahiti. He portrayed an idyllic life of free love and prelapsarian innocence which reinforced the myth of the Noble Savage, described in the works of Voltaire and Rousseau. 200 foreskins In one of the more striking passages in the Old Testament we are told that David bought his wife with a dowry of 200 Philistine foreskins. His prospective father-in-law Saul gave him the challenge, fully expecting David would be killed by the owners of the said foreskins. The King James version of the story says: “And Saul said, Thus shall ye say to David, The king desireth not any dowry, but an hundred foreskins of the Philistines, to be avenged of the king’s enemies.” David and his men went out and killed 200 Philistines. He presented their foreskins to the king, who duly gave him his daughter Michal in marriage (1 Samuel 18:26) – though he later divorced the couple and married Michal off to someone else. Private hospitals make millions of dollars every year selling excised foreskins to bioresearch laboratories and pharmaceutical companies.