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  • Books And Authors Week: A Big-Time Librarian Kept “Goodnight Moon” Off The Shelves For 25 Years
    2025/07/22

    This week we're replaying our favorite shows about writers and the printed page. In this episode from January 2020, the New York Public Library didn’t have a copy of one of the most iconic children's books of all time for decades, because a librarian didn’t like it. Plus: two pranksters added silent records to a jukebox, but customers decided they liked the quiet.

    Top 10 Checkouts of All Time (New York Public Library)

    The Quintessential Librarian Stereotype: Wrestling With the Legacy of Anne Carroll Moore (School Library Journal)

    The Restorative Pause of Silent Record Week (New Yorker)

    I could write a book about the amazing Patreon backers that make Cool Weird Awesome possible!


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    3 分
  • Books And Authors Week: Never Skip The Dedication Page Of A Book, They Can Get Wild
    2025/07/21

    This week we're replaying our favorite shows about writers and the printed page. In this episode from November 2020, we look at book dedications. Most are straightforward, but there are surprises. Plus: a scientific report sheds light on the pelagornithid, perhaps the largest flying bird ever.

    Brilliant Book Dedications (Sad and Useless)

    Scientists Reveal What May Be the Largest Flying Bird Ever (Smithsonian)

    We dedicate today’s show to our Patreon backers. So if you join us, today’s show is especially for you!

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    3 分
  • The North Pole Moved Three Feet Because Of Dams
    2025/07/18

    A Harvard study finds that the thousands of dams humans have built over the last couple centuries have locked up so much water it's actually affected Earth's poles! We'll try to explain. Plus: starting today in Michigan City, Indiana, it’s the Singing Sands Sand Sculpting Festival.

    Water storage in dams has caused minute shifts in Earth’s poles (Harvard's Advancing Earth and Space Sciences)

    The Singing Sands Sand Sculpting Festival

    It would be a dam shame if you didn’t back our show on Patreon

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    3 分
  • Watergate Salad Is An Actual Sweet Dish Named For Our “Long National Nightmare”
    2025/07/17

    Today in 1972, a break-in at the Watergate hotel that kicked off a huge political scandal... and also, somehow, gave a gelatin dessert the name "Watergate salad." Plus: in 2022, the National Portrait Gallery in Washington hosted an exhibit called “Watergate: Portraiture and Intrigue.”

    Jell-O Journalism: Investigating the Origins of Watergate Salad (Mental Floss)

    Watergate: Portraiture and Intrigue (National Portrait Gallery)

    This podcast is not a crook, but it is backed by our listeners on Patreon

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    3 分
  • A Blood Sample From A Late Composer Is Powering A Musical Experiment
    2025/07/16

    There's a new musical work that is, maybe, kind of, sort of from a composer who’s been gone three years. Plus: rice farmers in Gyoda, Japan turn their paddies into large-scale works of art.

    Musical Composer’s Brain Matter Is Still Making Music Three Years After His Death (My Modern Met)

    Tanjiro Emerges in the Fields as Gyoda Unveils 2025 Rice Paddy Art (Spoon + Tamago)

    Our show is powered by our backers on Patreon

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    3 分
  • Guitarist Cordell Jackson Was Rocking Out Before There Was Rock Music
    2025/07/15

    Today in 1923, the birthday of Cordell Jackson, a guitarist who rocked out exactly the way she wanted to for over half a century. Plus: today in 2023, a Florida woman apparently took a fire truck out for a ride.

    Jackson, Cordell (Women In Rock Project)

    Woman accused of impersonating firefighter after stealing firetruck, Florida cops say (Miami Herald)

    Help our show rock out every day as a backer on Patreon

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    3 分
  • A Burma-Shave Ad Offered A Trip To “Mars,” And A Guy Tried To Take That Trip
    2025/07/14

    A decade before Mariner 4 got to Mars (on this day in 1965), a company famous for its advertising jokingly offered its customers a chance to go to the Red Planet - and a very serious customer tried to get them to follow through. Plus: a design studio in France builds a walk-through installation out of nearly 800 old baguettes.

    Did Burma-Shave Offer to Send a Contest Winner to Mars? (Snopes)

    780 leftover baguettes turn into public pavilion by MERO studios in montpellier (designboom)

    Help this show keep keeping on / as a backer on Patreon

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    3 分
  • Quiet Riot’s Biggest Hit Came From A Recording Session They Tried To Tank
    2025/07/11

    Today in 1983, Quiet Riot released its massive hit single "Cum On Feel The Noize," though they kind of tried to tank the recording session at the time. Plus: for 7/11, a story about a 7/11 with a tree in the middle of the store.

    Cum On Feel The Noize by Quiet Riot (Songfacts)

    This 7-11 in Monterrey Mexico has a tree growing through it. (lostfoundartny via Instagram)

    Rock out with us as a backer on Patreon

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    3 分