Wikipedia:Recent additions
Appearance
(Redirected from Wikipedia:Recent additions/2025/April)
This is a record of material that was recently featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know (DYK). Recently created new articles, greatly expanded former stub articles and recently promoted good articles are eligible; you can submit them for consideration.
Archives are generally grouped by month of Main Page appearance. (Currently, DYK hooks are archived according to the date and time that they were taken off the Main Page.) To find which archive contains the fact that appeared on Did you know, go to the article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box.
Did you know...
3 April 2025
- 04:23, 3 April 2025 (UTC)
- ... that Burlesque (sheet music pictured) was a hit play of the 1927–28 Broadway season that was marked by its "depiction of seedy glamour and jazzy lingo"?
- ... that the themes of Somuk's artwork range from the bombing of his island during World War II to the origin of trees and plants?
- ... that a sprinter and a judoka representing Kiribati at the 2024 Summer Olympics were the youngest participants in their respective sports at the games?
- ... that Joe Biden ran for president twice before being elected in 2020?
- ... that Baabda residents collectively purchased the Seraglio of Baabda for 1,000 gold Ottoman liras in the late 19th century to gift to the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate government?
- ... that Herman Brown's estate and most of the proceeds from the sale of Brown & Root were donated after his death to his charitable foundation, which has given more than $2 billion in grants in Texas?
- ... that more than a quarter of the population of Germany is of migration background?
- ... that Sammy Powers was the only member of the original 1919 Green Bay Packers team who was not a local player?
- ... that Laurence Sterne was told to burn all copies of his pamphlet that depicts his patron's rival with a toilet on his head?
2 April 2025
- 00:00, 2 April 2025 (UTC)

Maida (second from right) with Roxy Music
- ... that Sal Maida (pictured) may not have a Wikipedia page?
- ... that the United States of America met a mixed reception?
- ... that The Avengers attempted to assassinate Alfonso XIII, King of Spain?
- ... that Barack Obama was a horse and Kamala was an elephant?
- ... that bliss could be found in California?
- ... that Batman had a hipster-proof fence in 2018?
- ... that a 1989 science show featured an unusually long signal delay?
- ... that Jackie Chan and the Mario games inspired hundreds of beavers?
1 April 2025
- 00:00, 1 April 2025 (UTC)

Schafer at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival
- ... that aged 17, Hunter Schafer (pictured) was a plaintiff in a successful lawsuit against an act preventing trans people from using the bathroom corresponding to their gender identity?
- ... that players on the Laos national baseball team helped construct the country's first baseball stadium in 2019?
- ... that accountant Dan Busby studied with a minor-league umpire in hopes of becoming one himself?
- ... that QuizKnock created puzzle games for the Imperial Palace East Garden?
- ... that while filming a music video for her debut album at a motel, Underscores had the police called on her by the motel staff because they thought she was shooting a pornographic film?
- ... that the family drama film Little Red Sweet revolves around red bean soup, as red beans symbolize "longing for family" in Chinese culture?
- ... that the author of If It's You, I Might Try Falling in Love made the main characters unfamiliar with each other so that she could draw all sorts of scenarios between them?
- ... that singer-songwriter SZA wore a hijab as a child, but stopped wearing it due to Islamophobia after 9/11?
- ... that in an effort to reclaim "the most offensive word in the English language" as aspirational, some people describe being "powerful in an unapologetic and feminine manner" as "serving cunt"?