When writer Ken Kesey first tried LSD, it was as a volunteer test subject for the Army Strangeness 8 years ago by Brad Smithfield
An English pub keeper who mesmerized with tall tales led to today’s “World’s Biggest Liar” competition Featured 8 years ago by Tijana Radeska
When John Gotti ordered the murder of his boss, “Big Paul” Castellano, outside Sparks Steak House, it became “the hit of the century” Strangeness 8 years ago by Nancy Bilyeau
Agatha Christie, author of “Murder on the Orient Express,” is outsold only by the Bible and William Shakespeare News 8 years ago by Nancy Bilyeau
Ratcatchers, the pest control of the Victorian Age, had their own rock star: Jack Black and his pursuit of the “fancy rat” Strangeness 8 years ago by Nikola Budanovic
The Collyer brothers were found amid 120 tons of belongings, including 250,000 books and several bowling balls, in their Fifth Avenue mansion Strangeness 8 years ago by Scott Antony
Swedes swarmed a Lufthansa contest offering a fully funded brand-new life in Berlin, even changing their names to qualify Strangeness 8 years ago by E.L. Hamilton
“I pity the fool!” Mr. T. started out as a Chicago bouncer and a bodyguard for celebrities Steve McQueen, Michael Jackson, and Diana Ross Glamour 8 years ago by Goran Blazeski
The sinking of the HMS Birkenhead: The event that gave rise to the “women and children first” protocol Self-Propelled 8 years ago by Boban Docevski
Take-out restaurants existed in ancient Rome and were called “thermopolia” Strangeness 8 years ago by Alex A
The early version of chess was chaturanga, a 7th century AD Indian board game of elephants, generals, and chariots Strangeness 8 years ago by Nikola Budanovic
Einstein’s handwritten note musing over the meaning of happiness sold for more than $1 million in auction News 8 years ago by Stefan Andrews