Some people choose to look at the comments rather than the official look-at-the-community route.
10 or 12 I think, can't remember!
As a child, I pretended to be superman and launched myself off an armchair and landed hands-first in the embers of our open fire. I relate.
When I finished my exams at school, I felt exuberant, and a group of us ended up at the village playground. For some reason I perched myself on one end of a see-saw and got a "friend" to jump out of a tree onto the other end.
While he was in mid flight I reevaluated my choice, and tried for a safe dismount. I nearly made it but one foot was still on the seat. That foot went up by what felt like a mile in the space of 0.003 seconds and I did a flip onto my head. Dazed, I immediately tried to push myself up and the see-saw caught me on the downstroke. Blood everywhere. Stitches in my head.
Making the existence of something public means you'd need to give away at least some details of who or what it concerned, at which point you're in the situation of either being a target or a blackmailer.
Is this an American thing? They're long enough where I am.
It's like the opposite of early-2000s games, where the car models had an ever-growing poly count but the fire was still an animated 2d sprite.
More importantly, unless you drive something the size of a bus, it doesn't matter which side you park, it'll still reach fine.
The Jaws music
I have one from 1993 in the UK, but I have no idea whether that was a weird exception or if other colleges did it.
I ended up buying more things because of the interviews they had on what than ever before, and it kickstarted my bandcamp collection.
You guys are getting promotions?
The US does it too, the other way around. They use fractions for a lot of things (3/8", half a foot, etc.) and then switch in decimals (like "2.5 inches") when they think you're not looking. Except for bullets for some reason which are in mm.