PeopleRobert Kearns invented the intermittent windshield wiper. Ford passed - then put it on every car they built. He sued, representing himself for 12 years after three law firms quit. Ford offered $30 million to settle. Kearns turned it down - the offer came without an admission. He didn't want their money. He wanted Ford to say they took it.
PlacesThe Space Shuttle Endeavour crawled through a Los Angeles neighborhood like a beached spaceship in 2012. Crews spent three days towing the retired orbiter 12 miles to a museum, felling about 400 trees to clear its wings. It paused outside Randy's Donuts, and a stock Toyota Tundra hauled the 150,000-pound shuttle across a freeway bridge as up to a million people watched.58 minutes ago
PlacesAntoni Gaudi died on June 10, 1926, struck by a tram on the way to his daily confession. On June 10, 2026 - exactly 100 years later - Pope Leo XIV blessed the Tower of Jesus Christ atop the Sagrada Familia, making it the world's tallest church at 172.5 meters. Construction had taken 144 years.58 minutes ago
AnimalsResearcher Dominique Potvin spent years designing GPS harnesses for Australian magpies - magnetic releases so only she could remove them. Within 10 minutes of fitting the fifth bird, an untracked female magpie freed a younger bird's harness. By day three, all five trackers were gone. It was the first documented case of birds helping each other remove tracking devices.2 hours ago
TrendingEntertainmentEd O'Neill, TV's Al Bundy and Jay Pritchett, holds a real Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt. He started training with Rorion Gracie in 1991, at age 45. Gracie promoted him himself after sixteen years of quiet, weekly sessions. O'Neill was 61 years old. He is reportedly the only non-family black belt Rorion has ever awarded.4 hours ago
TrendingPlacesThe Empire State Building's spire was designed as a boarding dock for airships. Passengers would cross an open gangplank 1,250 feet above the street, then ride an elevator down. In September 1931, a small airship docked there for three minutes in 40 mph winds. Two weeks later, a blimp lowered newspapers to the tower on a 100 foot rope. Updrafts made the mast unusable. No airship ever truly docked there.18 hours ago
FoodA South Korean supermarket solved the "they all go brown at once" problem with one design change: packing bananas at staggered ripeness stages so one is ready today, one tomorrow, the rest progressively later in the week. The product is called Haru Hana Banana - "one a day banana." It sells for about $2.70.19 hours ago
TrendingPeopleBo Jackson destroyed his left hip in the 1991 NFL playoffs and was told he would never play again. Doctors replaced the joint with a prosthetic hip. Eighteen months later he pinch-hit for the Chicago White Sox - took the first pitch for a strike, then drove the next one over the right-field wall. All 42,775 fans at Comiskey Park rose to their feet. He hit 16 home runs that season and won AL Comeback Player of the Year.1 day ago
TrendingEntertainmentAngelina Jolie bought 60,000 hectares of poacher-ravaged land in Cambodia, turned it into a wildlife reserve named after her son - and then hired the poachers themselves as its rangers. The people who were destroying the land are now the ones protecting it.273k1 day ago
TrendingHistoryGeorge Washington's cherry tree story is a myth invented after he died. But archaeologists just found real cherries hidden in his actual home. In 2024, workers at Mount Vernon uncovered 35 glass bottles buried in the cellar. Most still held whole cherries and berries, preserved for 250 years. When one bottle was opened, it still smelled like cherry blossoms.2 days ago
TrendingPlacesThe Hollywood Sign was falling apart by 1978. One letter had crashed down the hillside and it read "HuLLYWO D." Hugh Hefner held a Playboy Mansion fundraiser. Nine donors each paid $27,700 for a letter. Alice Cooper claimed an O in honor of Groucho Marx. Gene Autry took an L. Andy Williams funded the W. That rebuilt sign is the one you see today.2 days ago
TrendingPlacesYellowstone grew a brand new thermal pool over the winter of 2024-25. Nobody saw it happen. Scientists returned to Norris Geyser Basin that April. They found a 13-foot-wide, ice-blue pool that had not been there before. The water was 109 degrees, about as hot as a bath. Sound sensors later traced its birth to tiny explosions in December, January, and February. It had been buried under snow the whole time.2 days ago