Science & History
14 Lies About Dinosaurs and Paleontology Movies and TV Have Told You
Wait -- Ross Geller was lying to us?
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- By Andres Diplotti
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The Historically Incompetent Reign Of Sultan Ibrahim The Mad
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- By Ethan Tyrrell
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Australia Did A Research Study To See Where All The Teaspoons Go
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- By Ryan Menezes
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13 Bits Of Trivia For Slow Conversations
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- By Andrea Meno
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A ROUNDUP OF INTERVIEWS, DEEP DIVES, & TRIVIA
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.
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- By Ethan Tyrrell
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14 Smelly Facts You Should Nose
Your nose is not a morning person and 13 other fun facts about our smelliest sense.
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- By Reba C
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13 Trivia Tidbits About The Wild West (They Didn’t Teach At School)
Truly, there ain’t no business like showbusiness.
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- By Andrea Meno
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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.
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- By Ethan Tyrrell
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5 Terrifying Experiments (That Raise Even More Terrifying Questions)
Mad science is undeservedly vilified.
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- By Ivan Farkas
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14 Weird Facts About U.S. Politicians (So We Can Pretend We Know About Politics)
Fun facts about mostly not very fun people.
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- By Shea
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13 Newly Discovered Creatures Named After Celebrities
Some scientists name their discoveries after crushes. Others use them to insult comedians.
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- By Shea
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Education Became Mandatory In The U.S. Thanks To Satan
During the 1600s, religious folk saw illiteracy as the Devil's plan.
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- By Zanandi Botes
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Cleveland Had The World's Largest Book. Then They Lost It.
It had 6,000 pages and weighed 2 tons.
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- By Ryan Menezes
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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.
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- By Ethan Tyrrell
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14 Scientific Findings That Just Might Lead To Happiness
You have scientists' permission to go out with friends tonight.
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- By Shea
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