Welcome to The Daily Quote — a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, for July 17th.
Now, let’s talk about today’s holiday — Yellow Pig Day.
Yes, Yellow. Pig. Day.
It’s not a tribute to a new cartoon character or a trendy smoothie flavor. Or even pork chops or anything like that.
This delightfully odd holiday is celebrated by math enthusiasts — especially those who have an irrational affection for the number 17.
The origins trace back to the 1960s when two Princeton math students, Michael Spivak and David Kelly, created the concept of the yellow pig — a fictional, oddly specific mascot — as part of their obsession with the number 17.
Over time, it evolved into a quirky mathematical celebration marked by lectures, songs, and, yes, even yellow pig memorabilia.
Now, I know what you're thinking... “What does a yellow pig have to do with the price of my morning coffee?” Well, maybe nothing. Unless you paid 17 cents for it. But that doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate a bit of absurdity — or dig into the perfection of patterns and prime numbers.
So, with that in mind, here’s your quote for today from Albert Einstein, who once said:
"Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas."
Let’s take a moment to appreciate that. Math often gets a bad rap — a reputation for being cold, rigid, maybe even boring. But Einstein, in all his brainy brilliance, saw it differently. He saw math as something almost lyrical — like poetry, but made from the language of logic.
And honestly, that’s what Yellow Pig Day reminds us of: there’s beauty — even whimsy — in the structure of the universe. Seventeen isn’t just a number. It’s a prime number. A number with personality. A number so special it has its own oddly-colored pig.
But what is so special about the number 17 anyway?
Well...
It's a prime number!
It's the sum of the first four prime numbers!
Fermat's Polygon Puzzle - 17 is the largest number of sides a regular polygon can have and still be constructed using only a compass and a straightedge. Apparently, this is a big deal in geometry.
It shows up in random places
- In music, the heptadecagon has inspired tuning systems.
- In linguistics, some languages use a base 17 counting system.
- In physics and Computer Scence, 17 frequently pops up in formulas and code and no one knows why?
- It is culturally odd - in Italy 17 is unlucky - the roman numeral XVII can be rearranged to spell VIXI which means I have lived a euphemism for death.
And this is why Yellow Pig Day came about...
So today, whether you're tackling a tough equation or just calculating the tip at lunch, remember: math isn't just numbers on a page. It's the hidden rhythm of reality. And sometimes, it shows up wearing bright yellow and a curly tail.
That's going to do it for today, I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now but I'll be back tomorrow... same pod time, same pod station with another Daily Quote.