Kids make up all sorts of weird things. Sometimes they're trying to imitate the adults in their circles, while other times, it's just their imagination and sense of discovery taking over. It always leads to hilarious and somewhat relatable results. But what if all those quirky things that you thought were unique to you weren't so rare after all?

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In this poll, we prepared 26 things that many kids have done before, without realizing just how popular they might actually be. Jump into the nostalgia, vote on how many of these things sound familiar to you, and compare your results!

When you're done on this one, don't forget to check out the other polls that we have to offer byclicking here.

🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to theBored Panda Quizzesand explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀

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“Did You Also Do This As A Kid?”: 26 Things That Everyone Thought Were Unique To Them

Kids make up all sorts of weird things. Sometimes they're trying to imitate the adults in their circles, while other...
Lady Gaga Explains When She and Fiancé Michael Polansky Plan to Tie the Knot

Lady Gaga said she will be marrying fiancé Michael Polansky "soon"

People Lady Gaga, Michael Polansky at SNL50Credit: John Nacion/Variety via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Gaga spoke about her wedding planning when she called into Bruno Mars' iHeart Radio livestream "Romantic Radio" in honor of his new album The Romantic

  • Mars recommended his song "Risk It All" for the couple, and gave Polansky a shoutout during the livestream as well

Lady Gagais giving an update on the timing of her upcoming wedding with fiancé Michael Polansky.

Gaga, 39, revealed that it will be "soon" when she called intoBruno Mars'iHeart Radio livestream "Romantic Radio"on Friday, March 6.

"Hi, Bruno. Me and my fiancé have been traveling all year, but we're getting married soon," Gaga said in the voice message that played during the show. "We were hoping that maybe you could choose a special song for us."

"I know that voice," Mars, 40, said with a smile. "That is my dear friend Lady Gaga."

"If you're looking for a song to dedicate to your husband, I would say, off this new album of mine, I would go with 'Risk It All', track one," Mars recommended, before adding, "So I want to dedicate this one to Lady Gaga and her fiancé. Michael, this is for you too."

Mars then played the opening song from his new albumThe Romantic.

The low-profile pair were firstphotographedkissing at a 2020 New Year's Eve party in Las Vegas, and they went public with their relationship shortly after the 2020 Super Bowl in Miami. The couple later got engaged in 2024.

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Polansky, who is an entrepreneur and Harvard University graduate, spent COVID-19 quarantine with Gaga at her Malibu home. After the pair bonded, the tech entrepreneur, investor and philanthropist quickly became a major part of Gaga's life. "My dogs and the man that I love are my whole life," she toldThe Hollywood Reporterin November 2021.

Gagaconfirmed her and Polansky's engagementin July 2024. She introduced the tech entrepreneur as her "fiancé," while talking to French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal at the Paris Olympics.

Polansky went on to collaborate with Gaga on her 2025 albumMAYHEM, where he served as a co-producer and co-wrote several songs.

Lady Gaga and Michael Polansky are seen at Hotel Excelsior during the 81st Venice International Film Festival on September 04, 2024 in Venice, Italy.Credit: Jacopo Raule/FilmMagic

In an interview withZane Lowe for Apple Musicin March 2025, Gaga opened up about how Polansky specifically inspired her song "Blade of Grass" on the album.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

"As a songwriter you need life to inspire your writing and if everything is promotion, then I'll write about promotion and I won't write about that special moment I shared with you where Michael asked me how I would want him to propose to me one day," Gaga, explained at the time.

"We were in our backyard and I said, 'Just take a blade of grass and wrap it around my finger,'" she continued. "And then I wrote 'Blade of Grass' because I remembered the way his face looked and I remembered the grass in the backyard and I remember thinking he should use that really long grass that's in the center of the backyard."

Read the original article onPeople

Lady Gaga Explains When She and Fiancé Michael Polansky Plan to Tie the Knot

Lady Gaga said she will be marrying fiancé Michael Polansky "soon" NEED TO KNOW Gaga spoke about h...
Trump administration says Nashville reporter arrested by ICE will get due process

By Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration said on Friday a Colombian reporter for a Spanish-language news outlet in Tennessee, arrested by federal immigration ‌agents, will get due process.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Estefany Maria Rodriguez ‌Florez, a journalist for Nashville Noticias, in the state capital on Thursday. She was taken to an ICE detention center ​and remains in custody.

ICE accuses her of violating her visa conditions. A lawyer for her was cited by local media as saying that "up until now, she hasn't had a case with ICE charging her with anything."

Rodriguez Florez has lived in the U.S. for five years and "frequently reports on stories critical ‌of ICE," her lawyers said ⁠in an emergency petition filed in federal court, saying she was arrested without a warrant.

ICE officers had an "administrative warrant" at the time of the arrest ⁠on Wednesday, an ICE spokesperson and a spokesperson of the Department of Homeland Security, of which ICE is a part, said on Friday.

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"She will receive full due process and remains in ICE custody pending the ​outcome ​of her immigration proceedings," the DHS spokesperson said.

ICE has ​been at the heart of Trump's ‌immigration crackdown, which rights advocates say violates free speech and due process, and has created an unsafe environment. Trump says his policies aim to curb illegal immigration and improve domestic security.

Rodriguez Florez had a meeting scheduled for March 17 with ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations, her lawyers said. ICE previously twice rescheduled a meeting with her on her case, once due to a winter ‌storm and again when an agent could not find ​her appointment in the system.

Nashville Noticias said the reporter was ​with her husband outside a gym ​on Wednesday when the vehicle they were in, which was marked with the ‌media outlet's logo, was surrounded and she ​was detained.

Rodriguez Florez arrived ​in the U.S. on a tourist visa, filed for political asylum, later married a U.S. citizen and has a valid work permit, her lawyers say, adding that she and ​her husband have filed for permission ‌to adjust her status to lawful permanent resident.

The Trump administration alleges she was not ​authorized to stay in the U.S. beyond 2021 on her tourist visa.

(Reporting by ​Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by William Mallard)

Trump administration says Nashville reporter arrested by ICE will get due process

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration said on Friday...
US, Ecuador bomb drug trafficker camp near Colombia border, militaries say

By Jasper Ward and Alexandra Valencia

Reuters

WASHINGTON/QUITO, March 6 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Ecuador carried out a joint operation targeting drug trafficking ‌operations in the South American country, authorities in both countries ‌said on Friday, with the U.S. calling the move "lethal kinetic operations."

Neither the U.S. Southern Command, ​a branch of its military that oversees forces in Latin America, nor Ecuador's defense ministry, said if anyone was killed or captured in the strike, which Ecuador dubbed operation "Total Extermination."

The operations used helicopters, aircraft, river boats and drones ‌to locate and bomb ⁠a drug traffickers' training camp in north-east Ecuador near the Colombian border, Ecuador's defense ministry said in a statement.

The ⁠camp belonged to the Comandos de la Frontera (CDF), a Colombian crime group made up of FARC dissidents, and had a capacity for 50 people, it ​added.

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Ecuadorean President ​Daniel Noboa has made a military ​crackdown on organised crime a ‌cornerstone of his administration, and his government imposed tariffs on its larger neighbor Colombia, accusing it of not doing enough to fight drug trafficking.

He is set to travel to Miami this weekend to take part in the Trump administration's "Shield of the Americas" summit, which brings together many right-wing ‌leaders across the region with a focus ​on regional security and organized crime.

"The United ​States is a key ally ​in this fight," the defense ministry said.

"At the request ‌of Ecuador, the Department of War ​executed targeted action to ​advance our shared objective of dismantling narco-terrorist networks," Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell wrote on X.

The operation followed a similar U.S-Ecuadorean operation ​announced by the U.S. ‌Southern Command earlier this week.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington, Alexandra ​Valencia in Quito and Sarah Morland in Mexico City; Editing ​by Christian Martinez and Diane Craft)

US, Ecuador bomb drug trafficker camp near Colombia border, militaries say

By Jasper Ward and Alexandra Valencia WASHINGTON/QUITO, March 6 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Ecuador carried out ...

 

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