Anomalous club

Anomalous club Anomolusclub is a complete News portal about Animals, Nature, People & other Amazing things.

It was started on 2021-12-08 & Registered in Homagama Administrative District under Registration No- WF17350

Before he became the heart of Our Gang, Billie Thomas was just a shy little boy with a speech impediment — but his charm...
24/05/2025

Before he became the heart of Our Gang, Billie Thomas was just a shy little boy with a speech impediment — but his charm was unforgettable. Cast as "Buckwheat" in 1934, he first appeared androgynously with pigtails, but after the departure of another cast member in 1935, his character gradually transformed into a little boy. It wasn’t until the 1936 short The Pinch Singer that Buckwheat was clearly referred to as “he.”
Paired with Eugene “Porky” Lee, the duo became one of the most beloved parts of the show. With their famously garbled speech and the adorable catchphrase “O-tay!” they often stole the scene from bigger characters like Spanky and Alfalfa. Off-screen, Billie and Eugene were real-life friends who supported each other through the joys and chaos of child stardom. Thomas appeared in nearly every short from 1934 until the end of the series in 1944 — except for one, due to illness.
But what’s most remarkable is what happened after the spotlight. At 23, Thomas joined the U.S. Army and was honorably discharged in 1956 with two medals. When offered acting roles upon his return, he quietly declined. “Even the big stars had to chase around and audition,” he said. “It seemed like a rat race.” Instead, he built a peaceful life behind the scenes as a film lab technician at Technicolor, eventually becoming skilled in editing and film cutting. He found meaning not in fame, but in craftsmanship.
Ten years after his death in 1980, a national TV audience was tricked into believing he was alive and working as a grocery bagger in Arizona. ABC’s 20/20 aired the segment, not realizing the man they interviewed was an impostor. The truth? Billie Thomas had already passed, leaving behind a quiet legacy — not just as Buckwheat, but as a man who found his own path and peace far from the screen.

~Unusual Tales

In an era when women were told their place was in the home, Nellie Bly charged headfirst into the world and made it her ...
17/05/2025

In an era when women were told their place was in the home, Nellie Bly charged headfirst into the world and made it her own. Born Elizabeth Cochrane in 1864, she was just 18 when a Pittsburgh newspaper printed a column titled “What Girls Are Good For” — and she responded with a fiery anonymous rebuttal. So impressed, the editor asked the unknown writer to come forward. When Elizabeth did, he hired her immediately. As was customary, she wrote under a pen name. From that day on, the world would know her as Nellie Bly.
Her assignments were often “ladylike” — fashion, theater, and social pages — but she wanted the real stories. At 21, she left for Mexico alone to report on working-class conditions. Her dispatches were so bold that she had to flee the country. A few years later, in 1887, she pulled off a jaw-dropping undercover investigation. Pretending to be insane, she got herself committed to a women’s asylum in New York. What she found was horrifying. Her exposé “Ten Days in a Mad-House” led to public outrage and sweeping reforms in mental health care.
Then came her most daring feat yet: a solo race around the world. Inspired by Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days, Bly left on two days’ notice with only a small bag and a purse tied around her neck. Another reporter was sent in the opposite direction to beat her. But Nellie finished in 72 days — the fastest anyone had ever circled the globe at the time — and she did it alone. She became an international celebrity.
Later, she married a millionaire industrialist and ran his company, even patenting two inventions. Business wasn’t her strong suit, but when World War I broke out, she returned to her roots — journalism. She reported from the war zone, one of the first women ever to do so. Nellie Bly passed away on January 27, 1922, at age 57. One hundred and two years later, her legacy still soars. She lived boldly, questioned everything, and proved the power of one woman with a pen and a purpose.

Address

Barangaroo, NSW

Telephone

+94771120341

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Anomalous club posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Anomalous club:

Share