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Princess Bride earned that coveted cult classic title with its hilarious fantasy and romance fable. Westley must rescue his love from the evil Prince Humperdinck (awesome names are only the start) and meets dastardly villains, huge giants, hideous rats, and an old Jewish couple hiding in the forest. Best of all, Mandy Patinkin plays the unforgettable Inigo Montoya who sought to avenge his father’s murder on the six fingered man. It’s a revenge best served again and again and again.










The modern study of physics began during the Scientific Revolution of the 16th century, building on centuries of study from ancient cultures. Before Newton, Galileo, and Copernicus got their minds dirty with equations, early physicists came from the Middle East, developing the concepts of momentum, mass, weight, and force. The study of matter, space, time, and just about everything Star Trek ignores has revolutionized humankind’s view of the world and universe, as physicists say. Researchers are still searching for what the Theory of Relativity can do for the average person aside from make school harder.
Geeks might not appreciate the toil for farmers in the fields, but it’s because of them that we get to do what we do. Science in all its trivial glory was possible thanks to food production. Instead of everyone in the society hunting and gathering, a few people farmed while the rest become soldiers, artists, politicians, and scientists. Plus, without food production, we’d have never made pizza. Without pizza, geeks just couldn’t survive. For a much longer explanation of the awesomeness of agriculture, check out Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel.
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce took the first photograph in 1826 or 1827, proving to the future that life used to be in black and white. Niépce used the camera box invented by Charles and Vincent Chevalier, introducing this exciting new technology to peeping toms and private eyes around the world. Early cameras presented challenges, especially at sporting events, since the camera required sometimes several minutes of exposure to make a picture. If anyone moved, the picture would come out blurry. Early horse races were thus run very slowly for the benefit of sport photographers. Cameras have obviously sped up in the modern day, allowing high school boys to take a plethora of pictures of the girls locker room and email them to his friend before getting caught.
Corrective eye wear has existed since the 1st century, but the first eyeglasses are credited to Salvino D’Armate in 1284, the original four-eyes. Paintings and writings revealed various forms of early eye wear, often making tape on the rim look dignified. The invention of eyeglasses has benefited centuries of geeks who spend hours reading, writing, and more recently, coding and gaming causing eye strain and the need for obvious differences to make fun of. Even with contact lens and laser surgery (inspired obviously by Goldfinger), glasses remain a
Math has made all the science and development of society possible, but let’s recognize math for its everyday benefits. Math helps us bake cookies, figure out how many pages left to read for class, and calculate the benefits of our +2 broadsword. Math concepts were developed as far back as 1900 BCE in Babylon including one of the first known numerical systems. Greek mathematician Pythagoras introduced his infamous Pythagorean theorem during the 5th century. As people aged more, schools needed to fill more time, encouraging the invention of more math, from Algebra to Algebra II to the really advanced Algebra III.

