Here are the latest widely reported updates on Guinness World Records as of now.
- Guinness World Records site and major outlets continue to highlight notable record-breakers across categories like sports, food, and stunt feats, with updates often posted weekly.[5]
- Recent coverage includes high-profile record attempts and verifications, plus occasional revocations or corrections when evidence is insufficient or standards change.[2][4]
- For the most current, browse the official Guinness World Records homepage or their latest news feed, which aggregates new records and related features.[5]
If you’d like, I can pull and summarize the most recent three to five entries from a specific outlet (e.g., official site, CBS News, SCMP) and provide quick highlights.
Sources
Guinness World Records declared the record for the "behemoth blueberry" that's as big as a ping pong ball. Guinness World Records revoked a dog's title as the world's oldest following an investigation. Bobi, who died in October, was reportedly 31, but evidence was lacking. Last year, we brought you the story of a 90-year-old gravedigger in Galveston, Indiana, who refuses to retire. Ever since his inspiring story was told, he has been buried in fan mail. Steve Hartman has more in "On the Road."...
www.cbsnews.comLatest London news, business, sport, showbiz and entertainment from the London Evening Standard.
www.standard.co.ukFind Guinness World Records Latest News, Videos & Pictures on Guinness World Records and see latest updates, news, information from NDTV.COM. Explore more on Guinness World Records.
www.ndtv.comSearch the Guinness World Records website
www.guinnessworldrecords.comWJLA is the local ABC affiliate for the greater Washington DC area. From our studios in Arlington, VA ABC7 covers national and local news, sports, weather, traffic and culture and carries entertainment and sports programming. WJLA serves Alexandria, Springfield, Annandale, Tysons, Reston, Ashburn, Centreville and Manassas, Virginia and Bethesda, Rockville, Gaithersburg, Silver Spring, Wheaton, Beltsville, Greenbelt, Bowie, College Park, Largo, Crofton, Annapolis, Hyattsville and Takoma Park,...
wjla.comGuinness World Records was founded in 1951 when Sir Hugh Beaver - then managing director of the Guinness Brewery - asked a simple question: what was Europe's fastest game bird? With the help of the London-based fact-finding twins Norris and Ross McWhirter, he set about creating a definitive catalogue of notable feats which culminated on August 27, 1955, in the publication of the first edition of "The Guinness Book of Records". By Christmas that year it became Britain's number one bestseller...
www.scmp.comThe Guinness World Records official site with ultimate record-breaking facts & achievements. Do you want to set a world record? Are you Officially Amazing?
www.guinnessworldrecords.comGuinness World Records
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