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.
AnimalsCambodia carved a giant stone statue of a rat. It honors Magawa, who spent five years sniffing out landmines there. He became the first rat ever given the PDSA Gold Medal. That medal is the animal world's version of the George Cross. Magawa found 71 landmines and 38 unexploded bombs before he retired in 2021. He cleared ground equal to roughly 20 football fields.51 minutes ago
TrendingPlacesLake Michigan turned crystal clear turquoise in April 2015. A Coast Guard helicopter crew spotted something incredible on patrol. Complete century-old shipwrecks sat visible on the lake floor below them. The James McBride was a 121-foot brig that sank in 1857. It rested in 5 to 15 feet of water. Nearby, the Rising Sun wrecked in 1917 with all 32 aboard rescued. The lake holds an estimated 1,500 shipwrecks, and several remain unidentified.4 hours ago
TrendingPlacesBetty Willis designed the "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" sign in 1959 and never copyrighted it. She called it her gift to the city, leaving the design free for anyone to use. That is why it appears legally on T-shirts, postcards, and souvenirs around the world with no royalties owed. She once said: "I should make a buck out of it. Everybody else is."18 hours ago
TrendingEntertainmentAlice Cooper got sober in 1983 by trading one addiction for another. In rehab, he took up golf. He played 36 holes a day, every single day, for a year, always with club pros. The new habit replaced the drinking for good. He still tees off six days a week at 5:30am. He once seriously considered playing a pro tournament in full stage makeup.1 day ago
TrendingPlacesDeath Valley is the hottest, driest place in North America. In February 2024, record rain turned its lowest point into a temporary lake called Lake Manly. It stretched six miles long and three miles wide, but only a foot deep. Death Valley has no outlet to the sea, so a lake this size almost never forms. People still grabbed kayaks and paddled across it.1 day ago
PlacesMachu Picchu has been called the wrong name for over 100 years. A 2022 study found the Incas most likely called it "Huayna Picchu." The name "Machu Picchu" belongs to a different mountain nearby. Explorer Hiram Bingham attached the wrong label in 1911. The world knows it wrong - and it will stay that way.1 day ago
PlacesKowloon Walled City crammed 33,000 people into just 6.4 acres - one city block. That made it the densest place in recorded human history. About 300 towers rose 14 storeys high, packed so close that sunlight never reached the alleys. Neither Britain nor China governed it, so residents built their own unlicensed economy. It was demolished in 1993-1994. The site is now a park.1 day ago
TrendingPeopleCarson Schmidt and Erik Masuda drove seven hours from Sacramento for a ski day at Palisades Tahoe. On their very first run, they spotted ski tips in the snow - and found a stranger buried several feet deep, face turning purple. They dug him out with their bare hands. He gasped, came around, and skied off to find his wife.2 days ago
PlacesAt the edge of Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, a storm has returned night after night for centuries. It produces almost 250 lightning flashes per km2 per year - more than anywhere on Earth. Sailors gave it a name: the Beacon of Maracaibo. It fires 140 to 160 nights a year, for up to 9 hours a night. Zulia state put a white lightning bolt on its flag.2 days ago
PlacesYacouba Sawadogo was a farmer in Burkina Faso who fought the desert with holes. He spent four decades digging zaï pits by hand. Each pit was packed with compost to capture rainfall and feed the soil below. Cracked, barren land became a living forest of nearly 40 hectares with more than 60 species. He won the Right Livelihood Award - the Alternative Nobel - in 2018.2 days ago
TrendingPeopleSerena Williams was booed throughout her 2001 Indian Wells final. Her father said the crowd directed racial slurs at him from the stands. She refused to return for 14 years. When she finally returned in 2015, the crowd gave her a standing ovation. She cried.2 days ago