Science & History
The Heart Attack On The Moon, That NASA Covered Up
They spotted it, didn't tell the astronauts, and kept it out of the logs.
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
Let Go Of Tools In Space, And Lose Them Forever
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
The Day That Had No News: April 18, 1930
- Authors
- By Ethan Tyrrell
- Published
A Joke Election Led To Our First Woman Mayor (And Prohibition)
- Authors
- By Nathan Williams
- Published
A ROUNDUP OF INTERVIEWS, DEEP DIVES, & TRIVIA
Remembering The Cabbie Who Tossed A President Into Pig Poop
Let's go, Buren.
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
5 Nice-Sounding Government Policies With Secret Racist Origins
The government never does anything out of the kindness of its heart.
- Authors
- By Michael Dawson
- Published
The Plan To Move The White House And Capitol To St. Louis (By Train)
This way, they'd avoid those D.C. mosquitos.
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
There's A Tree That Owns Itself
We may not be homeowners yet, but this tree sure is.
- Authors
- By Crystal Duan
- Published
The First Sunglasses Were Meant To Make You Look Like An Emotionless Slab
The future's so stoic, you gotta wear shades.
- Authors
- By Crystal Duan
- Published
Why Won't Americans Drink Tea?
Americans love waking up to gulp down as much jitter juice as they can get their hands on. But why is the only cold brew we like from a bean and not a leaf?
- Authors
- By Stephen Buckley
- Published
The 4 Great Manslayers: Japan's Badass Samurai Assassins
A group of elite assassins who went down in history.
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- By Cezary Jan Strusiewicz
- Published
We've Found Hundreds Of These Weird Artifacts, And No One Knows What They Are
These probably weren't just to look cool.
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
The Americans Who Became North Korean Movie Stars
During the 1960s, four American soldiers defected to North Korea. They became stars in propaganda films.
- Authors
- By Ethan Tyrrell
- Published
The Elevator That Was So Perfect, They Put The Inventor In Prison
He used no nails, so they claimed he was sabotaging it.
- Authors
- By Ryan Menezes
- Published
Staged Train Crashes: Our Dumb, Dangerous Old-Timey Pastime
Starting in 1896, staged train crashes were some of the most popular events in the United States.
- Authors
- By Ethan Tyrrell
- Published