The Bollywood Star Who Rescued 128 Women
In 1996, 128 Nepalese women were lured to Mumbai with promises of jobs. Instead, they were forced into brothels and held against their will.
The Bollywood Star Who Rescued 128 Women Read More »
In 1996, 128 Nepalese women were lured to Mumbai with promises of jobs. Instead, they were forced into brothels and held against their will.
The Bollywood Star Who Rescued 128 Women Read More »
At just 19 years old, Louis Zamperini made the U.S. Olympic team and competed in the 5,000-meter race at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
From Olympic Tracks to POW Camps: The True Story of Louis Zamperini Read More »
In 2016, Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan unveiled America, a fully functional toilet made entirely of 18-karat gold. Weighing over 100 kilograms and valued at more than $4 million in gold alone, the artwork was created for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.
The Gold Toilet Heist: A $6 Million Disappearance Read More »
This handmade wooden vehicle, designed for strength and economy, has carried livelihoods on its two wheels for decades.
The Wooden Workhorse of Congo Read More »
In 1942, in just 110 days, a city rose from the marshlands between Portland, Oregon, and Vancouver, Washington. Named Vanport, it was built to house thousands of workers drawn to Henry Kaiser’s shipyards during World War II.
Washed Away: The Rise and Ruin of Vanport, Oregon Read More »
In 1936, a brass plate surfaced in Northern California bearing the name of Sir Francis Drake and claiming England’s possession of the land in 1579. For decades, it was celebrated as a monumental historical find.
The Brass That Fooled a Nation: The 40-Year Hoax of Drake’s Plate Read More »
Deep in the wilderness near Little Fort, British Columbia, in the 1950s, Francis Wharton found himself in need of a new pair of dentures.
The Man Who Ate a Deer with Its Own Teeth Read More »
In 1974, farmers digging a well near Xi’an, China, uncovered fragments of clay that led to one of the greatest archaeological finds of the 20th century.
The Secret in the Ears: Terracotta Warriors and the Mystery of Their Faces Read More »
The so-called “five-second rule” suggests that food dropped on the ground is safe to eat if picked up quickly—typically within five seconds.
The Five-Second Rule: What Science Actually Found Read More »
In 1790, in Alexandria, Virginia, an 80-year-old enslaved man astonished prominent visitors with feats of mental calculation so advanced they questioned whether he might once have rivaled Isaac Newton.
The Mind That Stunned a Nation: The True Story of Thomas Fuller Read More »