The phrase used to describe a has-been reality star or trend originated on the battlefield.

BIG QUESTIONS
The four-letter words that still have the power to offend took a circuitous route out of our mouths and into our language.
Marijuana really does give you the munchies—here's the science behind why.
Catching a kid picking their nose isn’t too unusual, but have you ever wondered what makes them want to actually eat their boogers? Discover more about the science behind mucophagy and its enduring appeal to youngsters.
To be certified as organic, farmers can’t use prohibited synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, or hormones for three full years before applying. Further, any animals they have must be raised on organic foods.
Adorable Arctic foxes will eat anything they can catch on the snowy tundra.
You may not have given it much thought in the past, but you've most definitely seen a single shoe hanging around the side of the road. How did it get there?
‘Take it with a grain of salt’ all (probably) started with Pliny the Elder, but he was talking about literal poison.
Genetics, seasonal changes, and Earth's magnetic field all play a role.
You won't confuse a moth and a butterfly or an alligator and a crocodile again.
Birds are a noisy bunch, and there's a lot of variation when it comes to avian vocalizations.
Michigan maintains one of the most successful bottle return programs in America.
The abbreviations are widely understood as “morning” and “afternoon,” but what do the Latin translations actually mean?
When you spritz some Febreze into the air, it actually uses compounds called cyclodextrins to trap those odor-causing molecules.
People are still torn over the belief that the ninth president died of pneumonia after not wearing a coat to his inauguration.
Cats love to lurk around tubs like feline voyeurs. What causes this behavior?
Humans will gaze in awe at the sun during the Great North American total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, but for your pets, it will be just a normal day.
The bagpipe is a tradition at first responder services. How did that happen?
Once upon a time, there used to be B batteries, but they’re not manufactured anymore. Here’s why they disappeared from shelves.