Americans eat 100 acres of pizza a day. That would represent a giant square pizza a little over 2000 feet on each side!
That represents 350 slices per second.
Each American consumes, on average, 23 pounds of pizza a year.
The favorite topping is pepperoni, which is on 36 percent of all pizza orders.
Meat toppings are preferred 2 to 1 over vegetables.
17% of all restaurants are pizzerias.
The annual US pizza market is $31,000,000,000.
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Also . . . What did people use for plastic before plastics were around?
Celluloid (1871) is recognized as the first modern plastic. It was invented to replace ivory on piano keys and in billiard balls. Celluloid is composed of cellulose nitrate and camphor. This flexible plastic is what made the invention of motion pictures possible.
Bakelite (1909)[TM} was the first plastic to stay rigid when reheated. The inventor was Leo Baekeland from Belgium. When you dropped an old radio or appliance made of this stuff on the floor, it would shatter.
Cellophane (1912) was invented as a clear sheet wrapper for food.
Phenolic (1924) was a thermosetting resin. When an old radio or appliance burned out, this is what usually caused that pungent odor. (Young people raised on solid state equipment are not aware that old tube electronics with high voltage power frequently burned out!)
My first introduction to modern injection molded plastic was in American Flyer trains. Plastic of the late 40s was not robust and could sag when it got too warm. If you used too strong a cleaning solution it would melt! Some of the trains actually had a sag in the top coming out of the mold.
During WWII, all my toys were made out of wood. The few plastics around were not popular and metal was scarce because of scrap metal drives for the war effort. (My mother had to wash out cans and crush them flat for the war effort recycling.)
What about before plastics?
People used horns, bone, sea shells, mica, tusks, horses hooves, plaster, wood, leather and tortoise shell for such items as combs, buttons, and implement handles, etc.
Hooves could be sliced off in sheets and then die punched out for items like buttons.
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