Mass Historia

365 Days of Historical Facts and (Mostly) Fictions

You can’t change the past, but with Mass Historia, Chris Regan has done a very fine job of making fun of it.” –Stephen Colbert

The History Channel meets Comedy Central in this sidesplitting, quasi-historical almanac by Chris Regan, a five time Emmy award winning comedy writer and one of the coauthors of Jon Stewart’s bestselling America (The Book).

Regan flips through our nation’s historical calendar to offer up unknown, unrepentant, and often-unbelievable facts for every day of the year. Based on genuine, historical occurrences, Regan sets out to rewrite history with his unique satirical voice.

As Regan explains, “Enjoy this book, learn something from it, but do not reference it in any scholarly paper.” Consider entries like June 12th, 1991: “Russians elect Boris Yeltsin president. Yeltsin suggests a toast to Democracy, wakes up shoeless on a bus eight years later.” Or Regan’s entry for May 15th, 1718: “A London Lawyer named James Puckle patents the world’s first machine gun, because lawyering was not doing enough to crush the soul of mankind.” The reader will also learn about the November 11th, 1918 birth of “Armistice Day, which was later changed to Veterans’ Day, so that Americans could more easily pronounce what they annually ignored.”

Full-color photographs, along with amusing sidebars, lists, and mock historical images aid in providing definitive answers to historical curiosities such as, “Who is buried in Grant’s Tomb?” or the similarities between music moguls Kevin Federline and Johann Sebastian Bach. Readers will even discover that Alexander G. Bell’s famous cry of, “Mr. Watson, come here, I want you,” during the first telephone conversation was, in fact, the invention of the Booty Call.

About the Author

Chris Regan is a comedy writer who wrote for "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" for seven seasons, winning five Emmys and two Peabody Awards. He was one of the coauthors of the best-selling "America (The Book)" and his work has appeared in USA Today, New York magazine and all sorts of different websites, including www.masshistoria.net. He currently writes for "Talkshow with Spike Feresten" on Fox and "Frank TV" on TBS.

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