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The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) is an American labor union representing over 750,000 employees of the federal government, about 5,000 employees of the District of Columbia, and a few hundred private sector employees, mostly in and around federal facilities.
How to Break a World Record is a 2023 American reality-style music documentary film about a band's journey to break a Guinness World Record. The film was directed by Andrew P. Oliver and Dan Johnson, and it follows Stephen Oliver as he attempts to break the world record for 'longest marathon playing mandolin'.
Rotten Tomatoes Movieclips (formerly Movieclips and later Fandango Movieclips) is a company located in Venice, Los Angeles that offers streaming video of movie clips and trailers from such Hollywood film companies as Universal Pictures, Amazon MGM Studios, Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. (including content from subsidiaries New Line Cinema and Castle Rock Entertainment), Disney, Sony Pictures ...
The world's tallest man, as confirmed by the Guinness Book of Records, is Robert Pershing Wadlow, who was born in 1918 in Alton, Ill. Standing at a colossal 8'11.1″ (2.72 m) and weighing in at ...
Official Guinness record awarded to Agadam. The entire film was shot on 7 December 2012 at a three-storey bungalow near Porur in Chennai. [2] The film running for 2 hours, 3 minutes and 30 seconds was shot on a single camera without any cuts and therefore awarded the Guinness World Record for being the longest uncut film, [3] beating the record held by Russian Ark directed by Alexander Sokurov ...
Guinness World Records, known from its inception in 1955 until 1999 as The Guinness Book of Records and in previous United States editions as The Guinness Book of World Records, is a British reference book published annually, listing world records both of human achievements and the extremes of the natural world.
Alastair Galpin (born 1974, East London, South Africa) is the 2nd biggest Guinness World Records breaker of the 2000s decade, [1] breaking 38 World Records, behind Ashrita Furman. He immigrated to New Zealand in 2002, and says that his career in Record Breaking was inspired when he met champion rally driver, Simon Evans, in Kenya in 1998.
In addition, the film had the second-highest opening weekend of any movie, behind Batman Forever. [74] All three figures broke records set by Jurassic Park three years earlier, [69] whose successor, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, claimed all three records when it was released in 1997. [75]