15 Repeatable Facts About Groundhog Day
On the 25th anniversary of its release, here are some things you might not have known about Harold Ramis's comedy classic.
On the 25th anniversary of its release, here are some things you might not have known about Harold Ramis's comedy classic.
The sport of curling has been around for centuries, but it's only gotten its due at the Olympics over the past three decades.
If you thought the humor was sophomoric, you were on to something: The show was created by a teenager.
The literary classic received negative reviews when it was published in 1899.
From the Jamaican bobsled team to an Indian luger, there's a long history of athletes from more tropical climates infiltrating the ranks of the (c)old guard at the Winter Olympics.
The Oscar-nominated actor gets annoyed when people in the audience vomit during his live performances.
Their best handiwork should be impossible for you to see.
Though you probably remember learning all about Quakers and their doctrine of the "Inner Light" in middle school, your teacher probably didn't tell you that James Dean was one.
The scrappy little outsider of this year's awards season.
Why celebrate February's National Canned Food Month with basic chicken soup when you could try a whole canned chicken?
He’s got friends in low places and one multifaceted career.
In 1988, one year before 'Cops' began asking the bad boys of America “What'cha gonna do when they come for you?,” noted victims’ advocate John Walsh was turning every American with access to Fox into a potential crime-solver on 'America’s Most Wanted'.
Getting your plates sparkly clean is just the beginning of what your dishwasher can do.
Social media is buzzing about Netflix's unexpected release of 'The Cloverfield Paradox' during Super Bowl LII. But let's take a look back at the movie that started it all 10 years ago.
5. Though the lead was written for Frances McDormand, she initially resisted, thinking she was too old for the part.
This tender look at the lives of ordinary American families has been wowing theatergoers for 80 years.
Parks didn't set out to become "the first lady of civil rights," but a powerful act of defiance turned her into an icon for the ages.
Ray Bradbury's science fiction classic Fahrenheit 451, published in 1953, remains full of surprises, contradictions, and misconceptions.
There are plenty of modern cosmetic practices that run the gamut from physically painful to medically risky. But most don’t hold a candle to the hazardous cosmetic techniques of yore.
Finally, a board game reflecting real-world values.
For history buffs and word nerds, "you jerk" just doesn't have the same ring as "you unlicked cub" and these other 18th-century insults.