(Redirected from The Guinness Book of Records)
Guinness World Records 2007 edition.
'''Guinness World Records''', known until 2000 as '''The Guinness Book of Records''' (and in previous
U.S. editions '''The Guinness Book of World Records'''), is a
reference book published annually, containing an internationally recognized collection of
world records, both human achievements and the extreme of the natural world. The book itself holds a world record, as the best-selling copyrighted series.
[1]
Origins
On
10 November 1951,
Sir Hugh Beaver, then the managing director of the
Guinness Brewery, went on a shooting party in
North Slob, by the
River Slaney in
County Wexford,
Ireland. He became involved in an argument: which was the fastest game bird in
Europe, the
golden plover or the
grouse? That evening at Castlebridge House, he realized that it was impossible to confirm in reference books whether or not the golden plover was Europe's fastest game bird.
[2]
Beaver thought that there must be numerous other questions debated nightly in the 81,400 pubs in Britain and Ireland, but there was no book with which to settle arguments about records. He realized then that a book supplying the answers to this sort of question might prove popular.
Beaver’s idea became reality when Guinness employee
Christopher Chataway recommended student twins
Norris and
Ross McWhirter, who had been running a fact-finding agency in
London. The brothers were commissioned to compile what became ''The Guinness Book of Records'' in August 1954. One thousand copies were printed and given away.
[3]
After founding the ''Guinness Book of Records'' at
107 Fleet Street, the first 198 page edition was bound on
27 August 1955 and went to the top of the British best seller lists by
Christmas. "It was a marketing give away—it wasn't supposed to be a money maker," said Beaver. The following year it launched in the U.S., and it sold 70,000 copies.
After the book became a surprise hit, many further editions were printed, eventually settling into a pattern of one revision a year, published in October to coincide with Christmas sales. The McWhirters continued to publish it and related books for many years. Ross was
assassinated by the
Provisional Irish Republican Army in 1975. Both brothers had an encyclopedic memory — on the TV series ''
Record Breakers'', based upon the book, they would take questions posed by children in the audience on various world records, and would usually be able to give the correct answer. Following
McWhirter's assassination, the feature was called "Norris on the Spot".
Evolution
Recent editions have focused on record feats by
human competitors. Competitions range from obvious ones such as
weightlifting to the more entertaining such as longest
egg-throwing distance or the number of
hot dogs that can be consumed in ten minutes - although
eating contest and
beer and alcohol consumption entries are no longer accepted, possibly for fear of
litigation. Besides records about competitions, it contains such facts as the heaviest
tumor, the most poisonous plant, the shortest
river (
Roe River), the longest-running drama (''
Guiding Light''), the longest serving members of a drama series (
William Roache for
Coronation Street in the UK,
Kate Ritchie and
Ray Meagher for
Home and Away in Australia), the world's most successful salesman (
Joe Girard) and the only brother and sister to have solo number one singles in UK chart history (
Daniel and
Natasha Bedingfield). Many records also relate to the youngest person who achieved something, such as the youngest person to visit all nations of the world, being
Maurizio Giuliano.
[4]
Each edition contains a selection of the large set of records in the Guinness database, and the criteria for that choice have changed over the years.
The ousting of Norris McWhirter from his consulting role in 1995 and the subsequent decision by Diageo plc to sell the Guinness World Records brand have shifted it from a text-heavy reference book to a highly-illustrated, colourful product.
These changes have done no harm to its commercial success: the ''Guinness Book of Records'' is the world's most sold
copyrighted book, thus earning it an entry within its own pages. A number of
spin-off books and
television series have also been produced. Again the emphasis in these shows has been on spectacular, entertaining stunts, rather than any aspiration to inform or educate. The Guinness World Record brand is now owned by
HIT Entertainment.

Madonna is the most successful female recording artist in the music history and she is the highest earning female singer of all time, according to the 2007 Guinness Book of Records.
[5]
Guinness World Records do not monitor the category of 'Person with the most records' as this changes too frequently, and records that once existed may now have been 'rested' and therefore this would not be a fair category.
In 2005, Guinness designated
9 November as ''International Guinness World Records Day'' to encourage breaking of world records; it was described as "phenomenally successful". The 2006 version was dubbed as, "the world’s biggest international event" with an estimated 100,000 people participating in over 10 countries. The promotion has earned Guinness a whopping 2,244 all-new valid records in 12 months, which is a 173% increase over the previous year.
[6]
In 2006,
Michael Jackson visited the Guinness World Records office in London to collect 7 Official Records Certificates related to his successful career as a vocalist and song writer.
[7]
On
9 January 2007, Guinness announced it was working with
AskMeNow to offer mobile access to the Guinness World Records databases. The company has been collaborating with the UK-based firm
Texperts for several years already, and it offers both companies exclusive access to their database.
Ethical issues

Steven Petrosino, drinking 500 ml beer in 0.4 seconds in June 1977.
[8][9] Guinness accepted only the record for one litre, but later dropped all beer and alcohol records from their compendium in 1991.
Several world records that were once included in the book have been removed for ethical reasons. By publishing world records in a category, the book may encourage others to try to beat that record, even at the expense of their own health and safety. For example, following publication of a "heaviest cat" record, many
cat owners overfed their pets beyond the bounds of what was healthy, so entries such as these were removed. The Guinness Book also dropped records within their "eating and drinking records" section of Human Achievements in 1991 over concerns that potential competitors could do harm to themselves and expose the publisher to potential
litigation. These changes included the removal of all
liquor,
wine and
beer drinking records, along with other unusual records for consuming such unlikely things as bicycles and trees.
[10]
Other records, such as
sword swallowing, were closed to further entry as the current holders had performed beyond what are considered safe human tolerance levels. There have been cases where closed records have been reopened. For example, the sword swallowing record was listed as closed in 1990 Guinness Book of World Records, but the ''
Guinness World Records Primetime'' TV show, which started in 1998, accepted three sword swallowing challenges.
Chain letters are also not allowed. "Guinness World Records does not accept any records relating to chain letters, sent by post or e-mail. If you receive a letter or an e-mail, which may promise to publish the names of all those who send it on, please destroy it, it is a hoax. No matter if it says that Guinness World Records and the postal service are involved, they are not."
[11]
Museums

Guinness Museum in Hollywood.
In recent years the Guinness company has permitted the
franchising of small
museums with displays based on the book, all currently (as of 2005) located in towns popular with tourists:
Tokyo,
Surfers Paradise,
Copenhagen,
San Francisco,
San Antonio,
Niagara Falls,
Hollywood,
Atlantic City,
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and
Gatlinburg, Tennessee. While some displays are dramatic, like the statues of the world's tallest and shortest people, or videos of records being broken, much of the information is presented simply with text and photos.
See also
★
Ashrita Furman of
Queens, New York, who is generally recognized as the individual with the most current records, although Guinness no longer counts having the most records as a Guinness record itself.
★
Ripley's Believe It or Not!
References
1. Watson, Bruce. (August 2005). "World's Unlikeliest Bestseller". ''Smithsonian'', pp. 76–81.
2. Early history of Guinness World Records - page 2
3. History of Guinness Book of Records
4. ABC News: European sets world travel record
5. Queen of Pop Madonna crowned highest earning female singer on earth Daily Mail, 2006-09-28
6. Records Shatter Across the Globe in Honor of Guinness World Records Day 2006
7. http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/mediazone/pdfs/entertainment/061114_michael_jackson.pdf/
8. World Speed Beer Drinking Record
9. Video clip
10. Guinness Book of World Records 1990 edition, p. 464
11. http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/member/faqs.aspx
External links
★
Guinness World Attractions (the official Museum website)
★
Guinness World Records (the official Book website)