The Dylatov Pass Incident: Has One of the Biggest Soviet Mysteries Been Solved?
Most of us would go out of our way not to set foot anywhere near a place the local natives refer to as “Dead Mountain.” That didn’t stop the Dyatlov Hiking Group, who set out on a sixteen-day skiing expedition across the northern Urals in late January of 1959. Experienced and intrepid, those ten young Soviet ski hikers had what it took to make the journey, at least if nothing went terribly wrong. A bout of sciatica forced one member of the group to turn back early, which turned
Read more »
Culture & Media news
Why Bob Dylan’s Unreleased “Blind Willie McTell” Is Now Considered a Masterpiece
The Genius of Brian Wilson (RIP) and How He Turned “Good Vibrations” Into the Beach Boys’ Pocket Symphony
An Architectural Tour of Taliesin West, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Iconic Desert Home and Studio
Every Wes Anderson Movie, Explained by Wes Anderson
The History of the World in One Beautiful, 5‑Foot-Long Chart (1931)
How the BIC Cristal Ballpoint Pen Became the Most Successful Product in History
Marie Curie Invented Mobile X‑Ray Units to Help Save Wounded Soldiers in World War I
Hear What Shakespeare Sounded Like in the Original Pronunciation
An Introduction to George Orwell’s 1984 and How Power Manufactures Truth
Talking Heads Release the First Official Video for “Psycho Killer”: Watch It Online
When the State Department Used Dizzy Gillespie and Jazz to Fight the Cold War (1956)
The 100 Greatest Paintings of All Time: From Botticelli and Bosch to Bacon and Basquiat
Leonard Bernstein: The Greatest 5 Minutes in Music Education
The PhD Theses of Richard Feynman, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein & Others, Explained with Illustrations