The Sound of (Pop) Music: Too Loud, Too Much the Same
In case you’ve tuned out of Top 40 radio lately (and we wouldn’t blame you if you did), we’re happy to fill you in: all pop music sounds the same. And scientists have confirmed it.
In case you’ve tuned out of Top 40 radio lately (and we wouldn’t blame you if you did), we’re happy to fill you in: all pop music sounds the same. And scientists have confirmed it.
You know, maybe we’re better off not knowing. After 75 years, the search for Amelia Earhart has become the stuff of legend. But amid a sea of unknowns, one thing’s certain: Scientists remain obsessed with figuring out what …
Simply put, space stinks. We aren’t quite sure like what, but we do know that the smell isn’t so pretty. Indeed, it’s so peculiar to astronauts that NASA wants to try and mimic it so that would-be space walkers know what …
Gone are the days of posterboard presentations. Google’s science fair recruited life-changing ideas from teenagers across the globe — language was no issue, nor was subject matter. Here are the winners of the second annual science fair.
Vehemently protecting a brand never looked so kind. Jack Daniel’s wrote what’s possibly the friendliest cease-and-desist letter ever to author Patrick Wensink, whose new book cover looks conspicuously like the whiskey bottle. …
It’s about as far from his Windy City stomping grounds as you can get. But you can get all of Al Capone’s storied mobster mentality — with a touch of whitewash — inside his newly-for-sale Miami Beach estate.
For $9.95 …
Val Patterson, of Salt Lake City, Utah, had a full life: his obituary in The Salt Lake Tribune identifies him as a “true Scientist” as well an “auto mechanic, wood worker, artist, inventor, business man, ribald comedian, husband, …
Kiefer Sutherland gets oddly personal in a new Axe commercial.
A 24-year-old surfer is killed by a massive Great White, prompting a debate over culling the region’s shark population.
Five separate meals on three flights had been tampered with, say Delta officials.
The famous outlaws’ weapons of choice could fetch up to $200,000 each.
This crowd wasn’t going to take no for an answer.