{"fact":"Neutering a cat extends its life span by two or three years.","length":60}
{"slip": { "id": 134, "advice": "The person who never made a mistake never made anything."}}
{"type":"standard","title":"Joe Safdie","displaytitle":"Joe Safdie","namespace":{"id":0,"text":""},"wikibase_item":"Q105093703","titles":{"canonical":"Joe_Safdie","normalized":"Joe Safdie","display":"Joe Safdie"},"pageid":66472695,"thumbnail":{"source":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/94/Joe_Safdie.jpg/330px-Joe_Safdie.jpg","width":320,"height":399},"originalimage":{"source":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/94/Joe_Safdie.jpg","width":540,"height":674},"lang":"en","dir":"ltr","revision":"1260594032","tid":"45d94849-b004-11ef-85a0-4b83426e855d","timestamp":"2024-12-01T16:49:47Z","description":"American poet (born 1953)","description_source":"local","content_urls":{"desktop":{"page":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Safdie","revisions":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Safdie?action=history","edit":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Safdie?action=edit","talk":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Joe_Safdie"},"mobile":{"page":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Safdie","revisions":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:History/Joe_Safdie","edit":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Safdie?action=edit","talk":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Joe_Safdie"}},"extract":"Joe Safdie is an American poet, critic, and educator. He's published seven books of poems as well as essays in journals including Jacket, Jacket 2, and The Los Angeles Review of Books, and most recently, in March 2021, Caesura. In February of 2020 he presented a paper entitled \"Edward Dorn, Satire, and the Via Negativa\" at the Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture; it was later published in Dispatches from the Poetry Wars and featured on academia.edu. While writer-in-residence at the Gloucester Writers Center in June 2016, he presented \"Charles Olson and Finding One's Place,\" later published in the Journal of Poetics Research. He also edited the literary magazines Zephyr and Peninsula. After 28 years of teaching English at various colleges, he retired in 2019 and moved to Portland, Oregon, continuing a pattern of living in cities on the West Coast of North America including, in reverse order, Encinitas, California, Seattle, Washington, and Bolinas, California.","extract_html":"
Joe Safdie is an American poet, critic, and educator. He's published seven books of poems as well as essays in journals including Jacket, Jacket 2, and The Los Angeles Review of Books, and most recently, in March 2021, Caesura. In February of 2020 he presented a paper entitled \"Edward Dorn, Satire, and the Via Negativa\" at the Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture; it was later published in Dispatches from the Poetry Wars and featured on academia.edu. While writer-in-residence at the Gloucester Writers Center in June 2016, he presented \"Charles Olson and Finding One's Place,\" later published in the Journal of Poetics Research. He also edited the literary magazines Zephyr and Peninsula. After 28 years of teaching English at various colleges, he retired in 2019 and moved to Portland, Oregon, continuing a pattern of living in cities on the West Coast of North America including, in reverse order, Encinitas, California, Seattle, Washington, and Bolinas, California.
"}{"type":"standard","title":"Stitch's Great Escape!","displaytitle":"Stitch's Great Escape!","namespace":{"id":0,"text":""},"wikibase_item":"Q2908806","titles":{"canonical":"Stitch's_Great_Escape!","normalized":"Stitch's Great Escape!","display":"Stitch's Great Escape!"},"pageid":2827359,"thumbnail":{"source":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/1d/Stitch%27s_Great_Escape_logo.png/330px-Stitch%27s_Great_Escape_logo.png","width":320,"height":165},"originalimage":{"source":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/1d/Stitch%27s_Great_Escape_logo.png","width":350,"height":181},"lang":"en","dir":"ltr","revision":"1292457489","tid":"c18cef17-3a9d-11f0-b70d-3b31d433ed50","timestamp":"2025-05-27T01:56:08Z","description":"Defunct attraction at the Magic Kingdom","description_source":"local","coordinates":{"lat":28.418589,"lon":-81.579744},"content_urls":{"desktop":{"page":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch's_Great_Escape!","revisions":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch's_Great_Escape!?action=history","edit":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch's_Great_Escape!?action=edit","talk":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Stitch's_Great_Escape!"},"mobile":{"page":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch's_Great_Escape!","revisions":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:History/Stitch's_Great_Escape!","edit":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch's_Great_Escape!?action=edit","talk":"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Stitch's_Great_Escape!"}},"extract":"Stitch's Great Escape! was a \"theater-in-the-round\" attraction based on Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise. A non-canon prequel to the original 2002 film that detailed Stitch's \"first\" prison escape, it was located in the Tomorrowland area of Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort, as the fourth attraction to occupy the building and theater space that was previously used for Flight to the Moon, Mission to Mars and the Extraterrorestrial Alien Encounter. Designed by Walt Disney Imagineering, many of the animators who worked on Lilo & Stitch were directly involved with the attraction's development.","extract_html":"
Stitch's Great Escape! was a \"theater-in-the-round\" attraction based on Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise. A non-canon prequel to the original 2002 film that detailed Stitch's \"first\" prison escape, it was located in the Tomorrowland area of Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort, as the fourth attraction to occupy the building and theater space that was previously used for Flight to the Moon, Mission to Mars and the Extraterrorestrial Alien Encounter. Designed by Walt Disney Imagineering, many of the animators who worked