There are so many modern museums that their number and exhibits sometimes surprise even experienced travelers. One of the most unusual museums in the world is the Guinness World Records Museum in Copenhagen.
At the very entrance, visitors are greeted by the figure of the tallest man in the world, Robert Wadlow, who was 2.72 centimeters tall. There is also a wax figure of the fattest man weighing 485 kilograms, who barely fits on the couch where at least three people could sit comfortably.
Another wax figure is a newborn baby weighing more than 10 kilograms, born in Italy in 1955. It lies next to a wax sculpture of an ordinary toddler so that visitors can understand how big that baby was. And what about the person with the longest bushy beard or mustache 3.5 meters long? All the figures are presented in full size and make an unforgettable impression on the visitors.
In addition to people with unique inherited physical features, the museum also shows those who set records with their unusual actions and bold deeds. For example, the 20th-century French singer Michel Lotito, who ate almost 8 tons of metal-containing objects in his entire life. For lunch, he ate eighteen bicycles, fifteen supermarket carts, seven televisions, a computer, and even parts of an airplane dressed with mineral oil. He washed them down with drinking water and never complained of poor digestion.
The spacious halls of the museum also display figures of the best high jumpers or the fastest runners, a builder who laid more than 1,000 bricks in just an hour, everyone who proved to be unique in one way or another. The collection of the largest fruits and vegetables deserves special attention. In total, the museum has more than 500 exhibits that have amazed the whole world with their appearance.