No, You Can't: World Record Ideas That Didn't Cut It Some of the alleged records rejected by Guinness World Records are every bit as interesting as the ones they take. And whether the submitter's idea for a new record is accepted or rejected, their common thread is wanting to be able to say, "I can do this better than anybody else on this planet."

No, You Can't: World Record Ideas That Didn't Cut It

No, You Can't: World Record Ideas That Didn't Cut It

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Ashrita Furman, seen here trying to break his own Guinness World Record for underwater juggling, currently holds the record for holding the most world records, at 119. But even Furman has had record ideas rejected, such as balancing the most salt shakers on an edge.

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Guinness World Records keeps more than 50,000 records of people who can say they are the most, the fastest or the highest in a range of quirky and impressive feats.

But when the company recently released its latest annual book — which added new records like Most Dogs Skipping On A Rope and Fastest Wedding Chapel, a wedding chapel on wheels — it makes you wonder: What isn't a world record?

There are actually guidelines; you can't just think of any record and try to break it. (Unless of course you're Homer Simpson, who tries for a record for the longest anyone's ever made one particular, incredibly annoying noise, and upon hearing that it's already been set, decides he'll break one for playing the banjo with a cobra).

Rejected Records

The thought of being the best in the world at something is alluring, but some attempts just don't reach the Guinness World Records standards of being measurable, breakable, verifiable and interesting:

The smallest paper airplane isn't an acceptable record by Guinness' standards.
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-Prettiest girlfriend in the world (a frequent submission of 12- or 13-year-olds trying to impress someone)

-Receiving the most job promotions within a year

-Smallest paper airplane

-Most home runs in a Little League baseball game

-Most unique name

-Longest (or shortest) poem

-Mind control over sporting events, such as predicting plays in the Super Bowl or a home run in baseball

-Worst Congress ever (submitted during the summer's debt crisis)

-Longest time between asking someone on a date and actually going on the date.

--Mike Janela, Guinness World Records adjudicator

For the rest of us, Guinness World Records does not accept claims for things like perfect attendance, silent reading or elbow licking.

"In reality, a lot of people can do it," explains Mike Janela, head of the U.S. Records Management Team at Guinness World Records.

Janela says that in general, the key to a potential new world record is that it must be measurable, breakable, verifiable and also interesting.

According to the guidelines, then, the organization won't accept records for something like a massage marathon, because they say they "cannot visually judge style and form as to be correctly done for a long time."

In other words, Janela says, "after two or three hours, what does a massage become really, except maybe just keeping your hands on someone's back?"

Another no-no from Guinness is beauty, though that certainly doesn't stop people from claiming to be the fairest of them all.

Truth be told, some of the alleged records rejected by Guinness are every bit as interesting as the ones they take.

There was the man who claims to use mind control over sporting events, and another who swears he's set a record for romantic brush-offs. Every time the man asked a woman who'd agreed to a date with him to actually set a time and a place to go, the woman would say she's busy and can't make it.

"And he applied to us saying, 'It's been going on for more than a year,' and he was wondering if that was a record for the longest time between asking someone out on a date and actually going on it,' " Janela says.

On the flip side of all this is a guy like Ashrita Furman. He has the world record for, well, breaking the most world records, and currently holds more than 100 titles.

Ashrita Furman holds records for pancake catching, apple cutting with a samurai sword, and over 100 other feats.

One of his favorites, he says, is racing the fastest mile in a sack.

"I did that in about 16 minutes and change," Furman says. "But I raced in Mongolia against a yak. Of course, I was in the sack, not the yak."

But Furman says even some of his submissions to Guinness have been denied, including one for Most Salt Shakers Balanced On Edge.

"I submitted it, and they sent me back a notice saying, 'No, it's not something we're interested in,' " he says.

Whatever the record, and whether or not it's accepted, there is one common thread.

"The No. 1 thing that connects everyone together is that you want to say, 'I can do this better than anybody else on this planet,' " says Janela, the Guinness World Records adjudicator.

Perhaps the hardest part? Figuring out exactly what that is.