This Instagram account dug up the weirdest things on Wikipedia – i-D
Wikipedia is God. Launched on 15 January 2001, the digital encyclopedia exists in 300 languages around the world and literally contains everything you could ever need to know. Would any of us have made it through school essays if it werent for the wisdom contained within? Probably not. Wikipedia is the best place on the internet, says 21-year-old Annie Rauwerda. Its collaborative and constructive in a way that makes it feel like a vestige of a bygone Internet era. I get so excited when I remember that the sum of human knowledge is available for everyone, for free. Isnt that exciting? It should be celebrated every day! Strangers online came together to organise all of the known information in the universe for you! Well, when you put it like that!
A longtime fan (she did a lot of wikiracing in middle school), during the first lockdown last spring, Annie found herself as one often does deep down several Wiki-holes. With nothing else to do, the Brooklyn-based Neuroscience student from Michigan decided to document the weird, wild and curious corners of the site she was uncovering. I was surprised there wasnt already an Instagram hub for weird Wikipedia articles, so I made the account one night. 160k people (including John Mayer) are very glad she did. Its approaching one year now since Annie shared her first post as @depthsofwikipedia one documenting the scientific research into how riding Disneys Big Thunder Mountain helped patients pass their kidney stones and over 400 posts later, shes brought Dicktown, chess on a really big board and cat nuns into the lives of fans.
Annie typically spends about 10 hours a week running the account, both trawling Wiki for weirdness and wading through suggestions sent in by dedicated followers. I get a lot of submissions these days, so I dont hunt for articles in the wild quite as much, but I still stay busy in comments and stories and maintaining the operations of merch sales, she tells us. About that if you, too, are keen to get your favourite depthsofwikipedia post in mug form (with half of all proceeds helping to fund Wikimedia Education) youre in luck.
If TikTok is more your bag, Annie shares highlights on there too. And if youre struggling to manage your own incessant urge to consume bizarre content from the depths of websites, Annie recently teamed up with her best friend Hajin to create @depthsofamazon. As their bio clearly states, posts endorsement of Amazons labor practices this is a safe place to chuckle at unhinged reviews without actually giving your time and money to the dark overlord of digital marketplaces.
Fascinated by her work, we asked Annie to compile and break down what she believes might just be the 10 weirdest things from the depths of Wikipedia. Find enlightenment below.
1. My Way Killings
There have been a number of deaths as a result of karaoke rage in the Philippines, including certain renditions of My Way by Frank Sinatra that were so bad people resorted to murder.
2. List of people who have lived in airports
I imagine it's like a layover that lasts for years. Motivations for living in the airports seem to range from 'ran out of money for a flight' to 'wanted to smoke and drink without his family bothering him.
3. Hedgehogs dilemma
It's a metaphor for the challenges of human intimacy. As much as hedgehogs want to move close together, they must remain distant to avoid poking each other with their sharp spines. It sounds like quarantine.
4. Small penis rule
When writers create characters inspired by someone in real life, this rule suggests they give the character a small penis in order to avoid libel lawsuits. The logic is that nobody would want to publicly say, That character with the small penis is actually me.
5. List of entertainers who have died during a performance
One actor, who played a character who died of a heart attack, died of a real heart attack between his scenes in a 1958 theatre performance. An 1897 Metropolitan Opera performer received a loud ovation after collapsing mid-performance, as the audience believed the event to be a stroke of brilliant acting. This article contains over a hundred more examples of bizarre occurrences like this.
6. List of sexually active popes
This one is a classic, and it's exactly what it sounds like. The article is surprisingly long and I learn a bunch of new pope facts every time I revisit it.
7. Sweater curse
Knitters hold a documented suspicion that knitting a sweater for a significant other will lead to the recipient breaking up with the knitter. Proposed solutions include waiting for marriage or starting with socks.
8. Animals with fraudulent diplomas
Certain pet owners have displayed the lax standards of diploma mills or otherwise fraudulent academic institutions by putting their dogs and cats through degree programs. Just because something looks like a diploma doesn't mean that someone has responsible training there's a pug with a bogus MBA.
9. Scunthorpe problem
As recently as October 2020, a filter blocked the word 'bone' during an online palaeontology conference. Poorly-designed profanity filters have created all sorts of issues, and this article documents dozens of them.
10. Timeline of the far future
In 20,000 years, only about one of every hundred core words will remain in use in future languages. The mind-boggling predictions continue all the way up to the proposed time for quantum efforts to generate a new Big Bang one trillion years from now.
Follow i-D on Instagram and TikTok for more weird internet stuff.
Follow this link:
This Instagram account dug up the weirdest things on Wikipedia - i-D
- Wikipedia just launched its daily historical facts game on iPhone: Which came first? - 9to5Mac - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Has More Than 40 Million Entries But These 82 Are Weirder Than The Others - AOL.com - June 7th, 2026 [June 7th, 2026]
- Celebrating 25 Years of Wikipedia in Slovakia - Wikimedia.org - June 7th, 2026 [June 7th, 2026]
- Translating Baltics Naval History: Bringing the Royal Baltic Fleet to Spanish Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - June 7th, 2026 [June 7th, 2026]
- I Chose to Preserve, Not Just Translate: Keeping Setswana Alive on Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - June 7th, 2026 [June 7th, 2026]
- This retelling of Aztec history will lead you down some random Wikipedia pages - waterford-news.ie - June 7th, 2026 [June 7th, 2026]
- Hundreds of prolific Wikipedia editors are threatening to go on strike - The Verge - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Cross-Platform and Cross-Lingual Dynamics of Wikipedia Sharing and Contribution - The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- 2026 Wikipedia Edit-a-thon: Women Photojournalists - National Museum of Women in the Arts - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Hundreds of Wikipedia editors are threatening to go on strike and the reason is these engineers - The Times of India - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- How Anonymous Wikipedia Editors Influence Global Narratives and AI Systems - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- 21 Extremely Creepy Wikipedia Pages That Are For Adults Only - BuzzFeed - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Every Museum Has a Story: Shared Through Collaboration on Bangla Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- The Wikimedia Foundation, which operates Wikipedia, has fired its former CTO and disbanded its community technology team, drawing criticism for... - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Seeing Like an AI: How LLMs Apply (and Misapply) Wikipedia Neutrality Norms - The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- This Page Shared 69 Weird Animal Facts People Discovered While Falling Into A Wikipedia Rabbit Hole - AOL.com - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Records of an elementary school that is closing will be preserved on Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- This Wikipedia clone is entirely generated by AI. Users are turning it into a cesspool - Fast Company - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- Wikipedia and Reddit Now Drive Over 25% of ChatGPT Citations in the U.S., New 5W Research Finds -- WSJ, NYT, and Bloomberg Do Not Appear in the Top 20... - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- A Wikipedia Clone Built on AI Hallucinations Is Here to Hasten Along the Death of the Internet - Gizmodo - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- Left-Wing Wikipedia Editors Fight To Keep Democrat Adam Hamawys Ties to Blind Sheikh Offline Even Though House Candidate Testified to Their Friendship... - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- This bloody Wikipedia is 100% AI delusion and thats the point - Cybernews - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- Halupedia explained: Why AI Wikipedia clone is raising red flags - The News International - May 16th, 2026 [May 16th, 2026]
- The Perfect Degenerate Time-Killer: Halupedia The Infinite Hallucinating Wikipedia - quasa.io - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- 'A really bad idea': Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales on Australia's social media ban, trust and the truth - Crikey - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- The Wikipedia Play: Overlooked Reputation Lever for Law Firms in the AI Era - Law.com - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Indonesia, Wikimedia reach deal to keep Wikipedia accessible amid regulatory concerns - Indonesia Business Post - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Capacity Building: Beyond Article Writing Organizing Wikipedia in Your Language with Categories and Other Curation Tools - Wikimedia.org - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Wikipedia has become a battlefield, and we are on the losing side - ynetnews - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- How to Find the Best and Cheapest Airfares Using Google Flights and Wikipedia (Yes, Wikipedia!) - AFAR - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- FAO expands free public access to agrifood knowledge through collaboration on Wikipedia - Food and Agriculture Organization - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Depth Of A Wikipedia Article: Michael Jackson Biopic Earns Negative Reviews, Here Are The Most Brutal - AOL.com - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Meta is logging employee keystrokes on Google LinkedIn and Wikipedia to feed its AI models - Startup Fortune - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Pat Kane: Wikipedia, encyclopaedias, and the dark art of 'wiki-laundering' - The National Scot - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- 25 years of Wikipedia - ucanews.com - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- In Belarusian Wikipedia, edits to political articles can no longer be hidden. Why did this happen, and what a - - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- March @ WMGH: Documenting Women in Highlife and Growing Our Wikipedia Editing Community - Wikimedia.org - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Now the PlayStation 3 game emulator configures everything itself - RPCS3 will use data from Wikipedia - ixbt.games - April 19th, 2026 [April 19th, 2026]
- Celebrating Wikipedia 25 in Tashkent: A New Generation of Uzbek Wikimedians Takes the Lead - Wikimedia.org - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Cebuano Wikipedia: From Ghost Town to Growth Engine - Wikimedia.org - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Celebrating 25 Years of Wikipedia at Manipal University Jaipur: Learning, Innovation, and Community - Wikimedia.org - April 17th, 2026 [April 17th, 2026]
- Wikipedia founder says trust is broken here's how to rebuild it - axios.com - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Women in the spotlight: stories that are shaping Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Writing against the status quo: What can a Suriname edit-a-thon add to the Wikipedia public sphere? - Diggit Magazine - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Musician Plays Magnetic Reel-to-Reel Tape in Sync With Wikipedia Articles for Its 25th Anniversary - Laughing Squid - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Meet the group correcting gender bias on Wikipedia and beyond - Thenational Scot - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Coming Soon To Wikipedia Archaeology In Aotearoa - Scoop - New Zealand News - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- An AI Agent Was Banned From Creating Wikipedia Articles, Then Wrote Angry Blogs About Being Banned - 404 Media - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Edit War Breaks Out on Chillis Wikipedia Page Over Trump Donations - meidasnews.com - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Editors Tried and Tried to Work With AI Content, Eventually Realized It Was Total Trash and Banned It Entirely - Futurism - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikidata graphs for data visualisation of endangered horse breeds in Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- How Wikipedia of cyber helps SAP make sense of threat data - Computer Weekly - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Closing the Gender Gap on Wikipedia: Art + Feminism Edit-a-thon - WashU Libraries - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Shares Its Stance on AI-Written Articles - newsbreaks.infotoday.com - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- AI Agent Runs the Im Being Censored Playbook After Getting Banned from Wikipedia - Gizmodo - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- AI Agent Gets Banned From Wikipedia Then Accuses Human Editors of Uncivil Behavior - tech.yahoo.com - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Colm O'Regan: 'Browsing Wikipedia is like taking a bus, missing your stop, and waking up in a strange town' - Irish Examiner - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- AI bot gets banned from Wikipedia, then writes angry blogs protesting about it - indiatoday.in - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Banned an AI Bot from Writing Articles. It Then Wrote an Angry Rant Blog - Republic World - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikipedia bans AI bot 'Tom': It responded with furious blog posts that went viral; heres what it said - bhaskarenglish.in - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- AI Bot Protests Wikipedia Ban With Viral Angry Blogs; Heres What It Said - Mashable India - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Bans AI Agent for Spamming Articles AI Responds With Furious Blog Rants - International Business Times UK - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Arabic-language Wikipedia filled with terrorist propaganda, bias report - The Times of Israel - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- I was surprised how upset some people got: A conversation with the creator of TomWikiAssist, the bot that edited Wikipedia - Nieman Lab - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Arabic Wikipedia Riddled With Terror Propaganda and Bias, New Investigation Shows - Algemeiner.com - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Wikipedia mulling whether to rename entry on Hamas beheading babies hoax - JNS - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- GZERO WORLD WITH IAN BREMMER: In Wikipedia We Trust? - KPBS - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- AI Memory Project Transforms Personal Photos Into a Wikipedia-Style Archive - Tech Times - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- This guy used AI to document his grandmother's life on a personal Wikipedia and now you can, too - Boing Boing - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Wikipedia Bans AI-Generated Text With Two Exceptions What Every Editor Must Know Now - International Business Times UK - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Twenty-Five Years of Free Knowledge: Wiki Palestine Celebrates a Quarter Century of Wikipedia - Wikimedia.org - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Who is pushing the propaganda tag against Dhurandar on Wikipedia? How an anti-Hindu Wikipedia Editor booked in Manipur for inciting violence cited... - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- World Jewish Congress report finds extensive, systemic bias on Arabic Wikipedia - JNS.org - JNS - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Quiz: Name these 10 national team managers from Wikipedia - Planet Football - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- The Unsung Heroes of Kit Culture: Appreciating Wikipedia's Pixel Kit Artists - Footy Headlines - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Wikipedia has banned AI-generated text, with two exceptions - How-To Geek - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- 39 Unusual Places With Their Own Wikipedia Pages That Showcase The Worlds Weirdest Sites - AOL.com - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- PR firm linked to Gates-backed AGRA edited Wikipedia to remove criticism - U.S. Right to Know - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- In Wikipedia We Trust? - WLIW - March 24th, 2026 [March 24th, 2026]
- Palestinians trained to fill Wikipedia with anti-Israel propaganda - The Telegraph - March 15th, 2026 [March 15th, 2026]