5 People With Wild Past Lives They Kept Hidden A fair number of these tales involve Nazis. Authors By Zachary Frey Published November 15, 2021
PICTOFACT 14 Lies About Dinosaurs and Paleontology Movies and TV Have Told You Authors By Andres Diplotti Published November 14, 2021
The Historically Incompetent Reign Of Sultan Ibrahim The Mad Authors By Ethan Tyrrell Published November 14, 2021
Australia Did A Research Study To See Where All The Teaspoons Go Authors By Ryan Menezes Published November 14, 2021
PICTOFACT 13 Bits Of Trivia For Slow Conversations If James Bond couldn’t actually be a secret agent, what’s left to trust in this world? Authors By Andrea Meno Published November 14, 2021
Computer History's Unsung Hero: An Ode To Dennis Ritchie Dennis Ritchie might not be a famous name, but he is responsible for major technological innovations. Authors By Ethan Tyrrell Published November 13, 2021
PICTOFACT 14 Smelly Facts You Should Nose Your nose is not a morning person and 13 other fun facts about our smelliest sense. Authors By Reba C Published November 13, 2021
PICTOFACT 13 Trivia Tidbits About The Wild West (They Didn’t Teach At School) Truly, there ain’t no business like showbusiness. Authors By Andrea Meno Published November 13, 2021
The Grifter Who (Twice) Sold The Eiffel Tower, Then Scammed Al Capone Victor Lustig was a legendary con artist who managed to sell the Eiffel Tower unsuspecting victims twice. Authors By Ethan Tyrrell Published November 12, 2021
5 Terrifying Experiments (That Raise Even More Terrifying Questions) Mad science is undeservedly vilified. Authors By Ivan Farkas Published November 12, 2021
PICTOFACT 14 Weird Facts About U.S. Politicians (So We Can Pretend We Know About Politics) Fun facts about mostly not very fun people. Authors By Shea Published November 11, 2021
PICTOFACT 13 Newly Discovered Creatures Named After Celebrities Some scientists name their discoveries after crushes. Others use them to insult comedians. Authors By Shea Published November 10, 2021
Education Became Mandatory In The U.S. Thanks To Satan During the 1600s, religious folk saw illiteracy as the Devil's plan. Authors By Zanandi Botes Published November 09, 2021
Cleveland Had The World's Largest Book. Then They Lost It. It had 6,000 pages and weighed 2 tons. Authors By Ryan Menezes Published November 09, 2021
Ketchup Was the Trendiest Medicine Of The 1830s In an era where tomatoes were bizarrely controversial, some people thought they could be used as a medicine. Authors By Ethan Tyrrell Published November 08, 2021