Trivia
What It Means To Be 'Old School'
You have probably heard someone say, “I'm old school.” You may have said it about yourself. Even though the word “old” is included in the expression, it doesn't mean that people who are “old school” are literally old. Age is involved only because a person who is “old school” has lived to form traditional attitudes and habits much longer than younger people. The expression has more to do with a way of thinking than it has to do with age.
By Margaret Minnicks3 months ago in History
Vesuvius Challenge. AI-Generated.
Imagine you have a newspaper. Now, imagine you roll that newspaper up tight, throw it into a bonfire until it turns into a solid lump of charcoal, bury it under twenty meters of volcanic mud, and leave it there for two thousand years.
By Sera Publishing3 months ago in History
Mythic Jukebox Musical Dance
In 1889, Louis Glass and William S. Arnold invented the nickel-in-the-slot phonograph, in San Francisco, installing it at the Palais Royal Saloon, 303 Sutter street, two blocks away from the offices of their Pacific Phonograph Company. This was an Edison Class M Electric Phonograph[6] retrofitted with a device patented under the name of ‘Coin Actuated Attachment for Phonograph’. The music was heard via two of eight listening tubes.
By Vicki Lawana Trusselli 4 months ago in History
The Story of the Marshall Plan
The Story of the Marshall Plan If you close your eyes and imagine Europe in 1945, you won’t see postcard cities or shining lights. You will see ruins. Entire streets cracked open like broken eggshells. Bridges collapsed into rivers. Families searching for missing relatives. Fields that once grew wheat now growing silence.
By Sayed Zewayed4 months ago in History
The Reflection That Changed History
When humanity looks back at its greatest achievements, only a handful of images truly define the moment. One of them is the iconic photograph of astronaut Buzz Aldrin standing on the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission in July 1969.
By Izhar Ullah4 months ago in History
Extinct Animals That Might Still Be Hiding
Did you like Jurassic Park? I mean, I watched it like eight times in theaters. Eight! No joke. It makes me wonder, do you remember when you used to watch a movie a bunch of times in theaters? Do people still do that anymore? If I really like a movie now, I’ll probably watch it twice in theaters, tops. I could never spend the money and watch something seven or eight times anymore. Maybe because movie costs much more now, I don't know. I loved Jurassic Park because, hey, I love dinosaurs! Or, I should say, I like anything interesting that I have never seen before. For example, when I hear the term 'extinct animals,' I automatically think about the dodo bird. I like dodo birds mainly 'cuz I think their name sounds really funny. I mean, dodo.
By Areeba Umair4 months ago in History
EPISODE IV – THE HIDDEN HANDS: The Secret Symbols and Invisible Architects of the Republic
They called it the New World, but from the very beginning, it was haunted by old ideas. Behind the ink and ideals of the Founders, there moved an invisible current. A quiet fraternity of thinkers, philosophers, and dreamers who saw America not only as a nation, but as a design. To them, liberty was not merely political. It was sacred geometry... a divine equation meant to balance the chaos of man with the order of the heavens.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History
The Loud Minority and the Manufactured Narrative
When President Trump appeared at the Washington Commanders versus Detroit Lions game, the media wasted no time turning it into a national spectacle. Headlines shouted that America had booed its own president, declaring it proof that the country was ashamed of its leader. Clips of jeering crowds were shared endlessly, accompanied by commentary claiming that even America’s favorite sport had rejected him.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast4 months ago in History
EPISODE II – THE FIRE AND THE FORGE: The Revolution That Built a Nation
Before the nation was born, it was burned... Smoke curled through the valleys of rebellion, a gray veil over red earth and restless hearts. The colonies had spoken their defiance in ink, but now came the language of fire and powder. It was 1776, and the world watched in disbelief as a ragged collection of farmers, tradesmen, and philosophers challenged the greatest empire on Earth.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History











