CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title
[1960] CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title - See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 4 - #brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania - Correct Answers: 69 - The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović
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CINEMANIA: Guess the movie title

See negative of movie scene and guess the title. Length of words in solution: 4
Correct answers: 69
The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović.
#brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania
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Golden Saloon

A guy comes home completely drunk one night. He lurches through the
door and is met by his scowling wife, who is most definitely not happy.
"Where the hell have you been all night?" she demands.
"At this new bar," he says. "The Golden Saloon. Everything there is golden.
It's got huge golden doors, a golden floor and even the urinal's gold!"
The wife still doesn't believe his story, and the next day checks the
phone book, finding a place across town called the Golden Saloon.
She calls up the place to check her husband's story.
"Is this the Golden Saloon?" she asks when the bartender answers the
phone.
"Yes it is," bartender answers.
"Do you have huge golden doors?"
"Sure do." "Do you have golden floors?"
"Most certainly do."
"What about golden urinals?"
There's a long pause, then the woman hears the bartender yelling,
"Hey, Duke, I think I got a lead on the guy that pissed in your saxophone last night!"

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Gordon Gould

Born 17 Jul 1920; died 16 Sep 2005 at age 85.American physicist who coined the word laserfrom the initial letters of “Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation.” Gould was inspired from his youth to be an inventor, wishing to emulate Marconi, Bell, and Edison. He contributed to the WWII Manhattan Project, working on the separation of uranium isotopes. On 9 Nov 1957, during a sleepless Saturday night, he had the inventor’s inspiration and began to write down the principles of what he called a laser in his notebook. Although Charles Townes and Arthur Schawlow, also successfully developed the laser, eventually Gould gained his long-denied patent rights.
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