Wikipedia:Main Page/Day before yesterday
From the day before yesterday's featured article
Liza Soberano (born January 4, 1998) is an American and Filipino actress. Her accolades include a FAMAS Award, a Star Award, and six Box Office Entertainment Awards. She began her career as a model, before her television debut in the fantasy anthology series Wansapanataym (2011). She achieved wider recognition for starring in the second season of Got to Believe (2014) and Forevermore (2014), the latter of which marked the first of her collaborations with actor Enrique Gil. Soberano found commercial successes in several romantic films, winning the Box Office Entertainment Award for Box Office Queen for My Ex and Whys (2017). Attempting to shed her image as an on-screen couple with Gil, she sought roles in other genres, before pursuing an acting career in Hollywood with Lisa Frankenstein (2024). Soberano has been described by media publications as one of the most beautiful Filipino actresses of her generation. She is vocal about gender equality, women's rights, and mental health. (Full article...)
Did you know ...
- ... that Mother Solomon (pictured) returned to Ohio 22 years after the Indian Removal Act forced her people, the Wyandots, into Kansas?
- ... that there were at least seven unsuccessful attempts to redevelop New York City's Kings Theatre before it reopened in 2015?
- ... that newspaper columnist Ly Singko was imprisoned for "glamourising the communist system"?
- ... that Aquilegia gegica and Aquilegia colchica, two species of columbine native to the Caucasus, can produce fertile hybrid offspring?
- ... that YouTuber Tyler Oliveira apologized after trying to drain a pool with paper towels?
- ... that the final seconds of MLS Cup 2024 were disrupted by players and staff who mistakenly entered the field to celebrate?
- ... that Mary Mellor argued that the COVID-19 pandemic increased the impact of the patriarchy on women, both at home and in the wider economy?
- ... that Taylor Swift released a demo containing lyrics that were trimmed from the final version of her song "My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys"?
- ... that a Welsh man lost more than £500 million of bitcoin in a landfill?
- ... that white chocolate (pictured) has been used as a coating for vitamin products?
- ... that baritone Ettore Verna twice "sang himself out of his pants" during a performance at the Boston Opera House, according to Billboard?
- ... that the members of an abortive conspiracy to restore the Fatimid Caliphate were said to have asked the Order of Assassins for assistance in eliminating Saladin?
- ... that the Lithuanian duke Jonas Vaidutis was elected as the second rector of the oldest Polish university after its restoration in 1400?
- ... that a Talmudic passage, "The Heart Knows Its Own Bitterness", has been used in Jewish medical ethics to justify patient autonomy?
- ... that Kurt Burris was the first American football lineman to finish among the top two in Heisman Trophy voting?
- ... that The King of Comedy Visits Shanghai depicted Charlie Chaplin in China fourteen years before it happened?
- ... that Frederick Warren Freer switched from studying medicine to art after becoming partially deaf?
- ... that the Japanese band Gohobi describes themselves as having a "tofu mentality"?
In the news (For today)
- Luke Littler (pictured) wins the PDC World Darts Championship.
- A spree shooter in Cetinje, Montenegro, kills 12 people and injures 4 others.
- Romania and Bulgaria become full members of the Schengen Area.
- In New Orleans, an attacker rams a truck into a crowd and opens fire, killing at least 14 people and injuring 35 others.
Two days ago
January 4: Colonial Repression Martyrs' Day in Angola (1961)
- 1853 – Solomon Northup (pictured) regained his freedom after having been sold into slavery in the American South; his memoir Twelve Years a Slave later became a bestseller.
- 1970 – A magnitude-7.1 earthquake occurred in Tonghai County, China, killing at least 15,000 people.
- 1977 – The English punk-rock band Sex Pistols' lewd and disruptive behaviour at Heathrow Airport prompted the record label EMI to end their contract.
- 2010 – The Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest structure, officially opened in Dubai.
- 2020 – Sembawang Hot Spring Park in Singapore reopened after being redeveloped by the National Parks Board.
- Louis Braille (b. 1809)
- Brian Josephson (b. 1940)
- Albert Camus (d. 1960)
- Brian Horrocks (d. 1985)
The day before yesterday's featured picture
The Mediterranean moray (Muraena helena), also known as the Roman eel, is a species of fish in the family Muraenidae, the moray eels. It has a long eel-like body and is found in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. The species prefers rocky bottoms and lives at depths between 1 and 800 metres (3 and 2,620 ft), with the 100–300-metre (330–980 ft) range being the most common habitat. It is a territorial species and is more active at night, spending most of the day in cavities and clefts between rocks. It hunts fish, crabs and cephalopods, and its bite can be dangerous to humans. This Mediterranean moray was photographed off the coast of the Maltese island of Gozo. Photograph credit: Diego Delso
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