1. Nick Stoeberl holds the world record for the longest tongue.
Nick "The Rick" Stoeberl from Monterey, California has been in the Guinness Book of Records since 2012 for having the longest tongue at 10.10 centimeters. Wow!
It sounds impossible, but Zach the Macaw certainly proves it can be done. He set the world record for most cans opened in a minute in San Jose in 2012. He was able to open his 35 cans. This is commendable.
3. Fastest talker
In 1995, Canadian Sean Shannon read Hamlet's monologue "To be or not to be" (260 words) in just 23.8 seconds.
4. Most lightning strikes survived.
The only person on Earth to have been struck by lightning seven times (each lightning bolt is hundreds of millions of volts) is former park ranger Roy C. Sullivan, a human lightning rod from Virginia, USA.
His fascination with lightning began in 1942 (losing large toenails) and ended in 1969 (losing eyebrows), July 1970 (left shoulder burned), April 16, 1972 (hair damaged). on fire), back to August 7, 1973 (new haircut) (gunshot and leg burns), June 5, 1976 (ankle injury) and June 25, 1977 (chest and abdomen) burns). In September 1983, he reportedly died by his own hand after his love was rejected.
5.Most nails hit their heads within a minute.
In 2019, India's Sai Dharavi KV hammered 20 nails in a minute using only his head. Saidalavi KV is a professional martial artist.
6.Fastest time to push an orange one mile with the nose.
In 2007, USA`s Ashrita Furman pushed an orange with his nose for one mile in 22 minutes and 41 seconds.
7. Most watches eaten
In 1998, Kim Seung-do, who lives in Seoul, South Korea, devoured five watches (the entire watch, excluding the strap) in 1 hour and 34 minutes.
Kim consumes up to 600 grams of metal a day, and she estimates she ate about 4 tons of metal in her lifetime.
8. Largest gathering of people with the same first and last names.
The Japan Tanaka Hirokazu Association, which was established in 1994 by Hirokazu Tanaka, 53, succeeded in gathering 178 people with the same name at a rally held in Shibuya, Tokyo in October.
Founder Tanaka had previously attempted the record in 2011 and 2017, but this year he succeeded for the first time in breaking the 164 record set in 2005 by a group named Martha Stewart.