Fun fact, they are restoring the Monitor at the Mariner's Museum near my house, you can even walk around in a replica of the ship. Check it out if you are in Hampton Roads its a cool museum.
Those weren't "broken up," just told to alter their business activities. Paramount had to sell the theater chains they owned, while Microsoft got the order to break up overturned by the Supreme Court and actually didn't have to change much of their behavior at all. Meanwhile, Standard Oil was forced to break up into 43 separate corporate entities (the two largest of which became Exxon and Mobil), while AT&T had to break up into seven local exchange operating companies.
Esso was the name on the gas stations. Esso = S.O. (Standard Oil). After the breakup, Esso became Exxon, Mobil, Chevron, and Amoco (all of which maintained the red, white and/or blue colors of Esso in their logos).
Esso only became Exxon in the US in the rest of the world it remained Esso, since there were no legal issues about the name there. And only in 1973 I believe, so not at the start of the break up, which was 1911. I stand corrected if I made an error.
When I was young, the signs at the gas station in my area said Standard and the company was still called Standard Oil. The first time I saw Esso was when we traveled to Canada.
Yes, @musiclistareus, it's still too hard to get it. I'm not American, so it hasn't been imprinted in my memory since elementary school. And the name doesn't come up in enough quizzes that I can get used to the correct spelling. It's not as if it was a "spells as it sounds" case, either. So I stand by my comment, thank you. (By the way, I left the comment almost three years ago. Took the quiz again today without knowing I had already taken it and came to the comments section to make exactly the same point, only to realize I already did in 2017. So there you go. Proof of concept. Either I'm too stupid to ever learn how to spell Sacagawea, or it's an unusual and hard to spell name that most non-Americans will have trouble with.)
Thank you, third grade music class for the Erie Canal answer. "I've got a mule and her name is Sal, fifteen miles on the Erie Canal...and she knows every inch of the way from Albany to Buffalo..."
What defines "blockbuster" for movies? Didn't the Wizard of Oz actually lose money in the box office, and only see heavy sales after its re-release decades later?
I mean it's a great movie, and a lot of critics and movie-goes would agree. If that makes it a blockbuster, then I'm sold. Otherwise, it's kind of a misnomer in that sense--unless I'm missing something.
Until I read Shelby Foote, I was under the impression that there were just the two ironclads. Apparently there were around 60 that saw action in the Civil War..
As a Brit there were a few questions I knew I wouldn't get (the battleships, the women on the $1, the Canal cities and the “Marines’ Hymn”) and a few I might have got had I had a few more hours to think, or on a different day.
Interesting to see the spread of questions and how some, of them are common enough knowledge over here and others less so.
Also, cut us some slack on spelling for Sacagawea. Please.
When we went on long trips, I would count gas stations. Exxon always won easily, quickly taking any suspense out of the "game".
I mean it's a great movie, and a lot of critics and movie-goes would agree. If that makes it a blockbuster, then I'm sold. Otherwise, it's kind of a misnomer in that sense--unless I'm missing something.
As a Brit there were a few questions I knew I wouldn't get (the battleships, the women on the $1, the Canal cities and the “Marines’ Hymn”) and a few I might have got had I had a few more hours to think, or on a different day.
Interesting to see the spread of questions and how some, of them are common enough knowledge over here and others less so.