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.
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.58 minutes ago
PeopleCarson 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.58 minutes 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 hours 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.4 hours ago
TrendingPeopleFred Rogers wore a hand-knitted cardigan in nearly every episode of his show. His mother, Nancy, knitted every single one by hand - each in a different color. She made him a new sweater every Christmas until she died in 1981. Rogers donated his cherry-red cardigan to the Smithsonian in 1984. It is still there.18 hours ago
TrendingHistoryApollo 17 astronaut Gene Cernan was driving the Moon rover in December 1972. The nearest repair shop was 238,000 miles away. A hammer in his pocket snapped off the rear fender. Moon dust began coating the crew and the rover's controls. Mission Control spent the night designing a fix. Cernan and Schmitt taped four lunar maps together and clamped on the homemade fender. It held for the rest of the mission. The fender is still on display today.1 day ago
PeopleLaungi Bhuiyan spent about 30 years digging a 3-km canal by hand through the hills of Gaya, Bihar - alone, while grazing his cattle - so his drought-stricken village could irrigate their fields. The canal now channels rainwater to 8-10 villages. When the story went viral in 2020, Anand Mahindra called the canal "as impressive a monument as the Taj or the Pyramids."1 day ago
TrendingPeopleGordon Ramsay finished the 2013 Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. The world's angriest chef swam 2.4 miles in the open ocean, biked 112 miles, then ran a full marathon, all in one day. He crossed the finish line in 14 hours and 4 minutes. And it was no stunt. He had already run 10 London Marathons in a row.1 day ago
TrendingPlacesMount Rushmore has a secret: a 70-foot granite tunnel cut directly behind the faces. Sculptor Gutzon Borglum began drilling it in 1938 to house America's founding documents for future civilizations. Congress shut the project down in 1939 and Borglum died in 1941. In 1998, his family lowered 16 porcelain panels into a titanium vault and sealed it under a 1,200-pound granite capstone. Nobody can go inside.2 days ago
TrendingHistoryHoward Johnson's was once America's biggest restaurant chain. It had over 1,000 orange-roofed diners selling 28 flavors of ice cream and fried clams. In the 1960s it was bigger than McDonald's, Burger King, and KFC. The chain shrank for decades. Only one restaurant was left, in Lake George, New York. That last Howard Johnson's closed in 2022. Today there are zero left in America.2 days ago
TrendingPlacesKing Tut's complete tomb collection is on display all together for the first time. Howard Carter found all 5,398 pieces in 1922. For a century, most sat in storage - Cairo's old museum showed only about a third. Egypt's Grand Egyptian Museum, beside the Giza pyramids, opened in November 2025 with all of it under one roof. A century after being found, it's all together at last.2 days ago