After a national survey, it was revealed four out of five adults thought this was a centipede.
Spot one of these on the beach and you will think you have found treasure. Then it blows further down the coastline and tricks the next person.
A decoration from the first-ever Trafalgar Square Christmas tree gifted by Norway in 1947.
Tides go in and out. Not open and close. You can tell this was a faulty remote.
Straight from the Watergate tapes. Still all hush-hush.
Sometimes Lego bricks end up with shark teeth jammed within them. Sometimes they do not.
A plastic anchor is what Dave thought they had called him in the pub.
63% of snowmen have plastic heads. Their bodies melt in the salt water.
The shotgun shell used by Peter Fogg off Postman Pat after that wild New Year's celebration of '99.
This was from when Big Stevo reversed his motor too close to that harbour. He knew that N'Sync sticker would block his view at some point.
The final hose recovered from the 1666 Great Fire of London.
The lid off the super glue used to stick the Eiffel Tower together in 1887.
No disastrous oil spill. Just a load of data lost at sea.
This was left over from the world's lamest attempt to drill for oil. No lube either.
A rejected decoration from that seminal Trafalgar Square Christmas branch.
If these “utterly deceptive twaddle-speak” tales (to borrow a phrase from Captain Jack Sparrow) tickled your fancy, then Rubbish Lists might be your next delight where Kieran spins 500 tossed-away shopping lists into quirky, individual stories.