Pine vs. PVC: How Real and Fake Christmas Trees Compare
Consider these factors before choosing a side.
Consider these factors before choosing a side.
They named it <em>Vaderlimulus tricki</em>.
Mount Vernon holds perhaps the most famous dentures in American history: those of Founding Father George Washington.
John Lennon had almost as many cats as the Beatles had No. 1 hits.
The glow-in-the-dark pattern stays bright for up to 10 hours.
Davis once said Jackson was "like a son."
Some athletes believe that smiling mid-competition improves their performance. Scientists put this theory to the test.
The bizarre material just got a little less mysterious.
For prehistoric residents of Indonesia's rugged Alor Island, fishing was fundamental for both the living <em>and</em> the dead.
After being banned from competitive skating, the beleaguered athlete turned to a new vocation: Getting her nose broken for money.
When Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote the poem that inspired the holiday tune, he definitely had the horrors of the Civil War on his mind.
The purple shade represents "the mysteries of the cosmos and the intrigue of what lies ahead."
A ruined castle will be restored thanks to the powers of the internet.
St. Nick brings the gifts. Krampus brings the pain. Here are some things you might not have known about Santa's demonic companion.
Both star home vigilantes, but only one of them builds up a body count.
Our ears share the burden of listening equally.
It's never too warm to see snow on Christmas.
The famed museum had to close its doors, which is part of what will protect the priceless art inside the building.
The rock icon is also a huge model train nerd, and he's selling off some of his collection.
Believers: Click at your own risk.
The much-maligned bird is a lot more intelligent than people think.
It sounds like nonsense … but is it?
K2-18b orbits a red-dwarf star in the constellation Leo, and it's situated in the perfect zone to have liquid surface water.
"The world is in a place at the moment where I think maybe people appreciate things that aren't so unremittingly horrible," says creator Charlie Brooker. "But you also don't want to short-change people on the unremitting horribleness.”