Video still of Aaron’s Inc., an appliance and electronics company in the US, record for the largest human mattress dominoes with 1,200 p...
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| Video still of Aaron’s Inc., an appliance and electronics company in the US, record for the largest human mattress dominoes with 1,200 participants at the Gaylord Resort and Conference Center in National Harbor, Md. The feat was accomplished in its first try and took 13 minutes and 38 seconds. The attempt was part of their annual managers meeting. |
NATIONAL HARBOUR, Md.
Aaron's Inc., an appliance and electronics-leasing company, has broken the Guinness World Record for the longest human mattress domino chain.
Guinness World Records released a video of the feat Thursday, showing 1,200 people holding mattresses behind them and falling backward into each other, one at a time, inside a Prince George's County, Maryland, warehouse on March 22.
The attempt was aided by a dominoes expert and certified by a Guinness World Record adjudicator. The previous record had been 1,150.
Aaron's CEO John Robinson pushed over the first mattress. It took 13 minutes and 38 seconds for the final mattress to fall.
The Atlanta-based company says it will be donating all 1,200 mattresses to Washington-area organizations focused on ending poverty and providing shelter to homeless families.
Source: AP
Aaron's Inc., an appliance and electronics-leasing company, has broken the Guinness World Record for the longest human mattress domino chain.
Guinness World Records released a video of the feat Thursday, showing 1,200 people holding mattresses behind them and falling backward into each other, one at a time, inside a Prince George's County, Maryland, warehouse on March 22.
The attempt was aided by a dominoes expert and certified by a Guinness World Record adjudicator. The previous record had been 1,150.
Aaron's CEO John Robinson pushed over the first mattress. It took 13 minutes and 38 seconds for the final mattress to fall.
The Atlanta-based company says it will be donating all 1,200 mattresses to Washington-area organizations focused on ending poverty and providing shelter to homeless families.
Source: AP

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