The Things That Make Chick-fil-A Stand Out

The history of Chick-fil-A goes back to Atlanta in 1946. Truett Cathy was searching for the secret of the perfect chicken sandwich, which turned out to be cooking the chicken fillet in a pressure fryer. Then he licensed his method to other restaurants before going into the fast food franchise business. You might recognize this as the story of Harland Sanders, the founder of KFC, except Sanders did it with bone-in chicken. The difference is that Sanders just wanted a faster way to cook chicken, because his fried chicken was already pretty good. Anyway, that was just the beginning of Chick-fil-A, which spread across the South and then went nationwide. Today Chick-fil-A is known across the US as the chicken outlet that advertises with cows and is never open on Sunday. Tom Blank of Weird History Food goes through the history of Chick-fil-A, including the controversies that land the chain in the news every now and then.  


A Gallery of Little Cats in Big Places

(Image credit: maisonsmd

A world built for humans must look so big to a tiny kitten. It's no wonder they want to explore every nook and cranny. That will keep them busy for weeks! But meanwhile, you have to tread lightly, because it's easy to miss such a small creature on the floor. Or if the kitten finds a nice cozy place to hide, you may be looking for quite some time before you find them. And you'd better check before you plop down on that bean bag or bed, because the cat may have already staked out her territory! The reddit post for the cat above features a second, closeup image of the kitten in case you can't see her well enough. 

(Image credit: Colar

Sure, you can get the kitten her own bed, but it still might be awful big for such a smol cat. Ah, she'll grow into it. Bored Panda gleaned their favorite such images from the subreddit Tinycatsinbigspaces and posted them in a reader-ranked list of 50 pictures to make you go "squee!" 


Detroit Finally Has a RoboCop Statue

Ever since Paul Verhoeven's 1997 documentary about Alex Murphy, Detroit's most famous police officer, people have sought a memorial to honor the cyborg hero RoboCop. The realistic project has taken over 14 years to reach completion.

The Detroit Metro-Times reports that the 10-foot statue of RoboCop is now in place at 3434 Russell Street. Crowdfunding raised the $60,000 necessary to hire sculptor George Gikas of Venus Bronze Works to construct the durable statue. Now the hero again stands watch over us.

-via Alyssa Hazel


"Forks Out" is a Muppet Parody of Knives Out

Cookie Monster baked a triple berry pie, but it's all gone! Who could have helped themselves and left none for the monster himself? Oscar the Grouch baked a garbage pie, but for some reason, no one ate his. It's a mystery that none other than the world's greatest detective, Benoit Blanc, can solve. It's only a matter of observaation and deduction, which are beyond a Muppet's abilities, having felt for brains. 

'Forks Out': A Benoit Blanc Sesame Street Mystery is a Muppet take on Rian Johnson's Knives Out murder mystery movie series featuring Daniel Craig as investigator Benoit Blanc. You can see Craig's reaction to this parody here (spoiler- he got a kick out of it). Sure, it's an ad for Netflix, which is now a distributor of Sesame Street and the owner of exclusive rights to two of the Knives Out movies. But it's the Muppets, so you know it's funny. -via Metafilter 


The Art-o-Mat: The Art Vending Machine

Do you remember cigarette vending machines? In the age of smoking in America, they proliferated in public venues. But as smoking became less common, the vending machines gradually disappeared.

In 1997, artist Clark Whittington took one and converted it into a vending machine for small pieces of art. He called it the Art-o-Mat.

The project was popular and Whittington, along with other artists, made more. There are now about 200 in service now, mostly in the United States. This one pictured above is in a Whole Foods location in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Art-o-Mats are great ways for artists to promote their work, earning $2.50 per sale. The guidelines are strict, though, as Whittington describes the mechanical requirements of the machines as "unforgiving."


The Medical Hoax That Saved a Town in Occupied Poland

An awful lot of underground shenanigans went on during World War II that were only discovered years later. Those who defied Nazi occupation knew that secrecy was a matter of survival, and after the war many just wanted to forget. Dr. Eugene Lazowski worked in Rozwadow, Poland, under German occupation. He lived near the Jewish ghetto, and he knew that he could only help its inhabitants in secret. But he treated children under the cover of darkness and smuggled medicine and supplies into the ghetto when he could. The Nazis were gradually taking the Jewish population away, and conscripting the non-Jewish residents of Rozwadow for labor. 

Lazowski's later fame came from the time he, along with his friend Dr. StanisÅ‚aw Matulewicz, engineered a fake typhus epidemic in Rozwadow. As more and more people in Rozwadow and the surrounding villages had to be quarantined for typhus, the occupying Nazis tried to keep their distance. Deportations ceased, and roundups for labor stopped. After the war, the story got out that there had been no typhus at all, although with confusing and incorrect details. Lazowski emigrated to the US and only wrote his version of events in 1993. Read the true story of how the doctors created a fake typhus epidemic in Rozwadow at Utterly Interesting. 


A Deep Look at Our Favorite Peanuts Characters

The comic strip Peanuts debuted 75 years ago, and we are all familiar with its many TV specials and movies -and merchanidise, of course. We all know the Peanuts gang and we all have our favorite characters. The core group of Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus, and Snoopy are augmented by a group of children and animals (but no adults) who each had their own unique personalities and roles within the group. 

This video is set up to rank seven (actually eight) of these characters from "criminally overlooked" to "global icon," but we know how such rankings can rankle. It's better to look at it as an explanation of their personalities, and how each one plays a role in providing someone we can relate to, or maybe even aspire to. That said, I am disappointed by the absence of Pigpen. Not that I related to him, but I always liked the character. -via Laughing Squid 


Raccoon Rampages through Liquor Store, Gets Drunk, Passes Out in Bathroom

A raccoon broke into a state-run liquor store in Ashland, Virginia, which is just north of Richmond. According to a Facebook post for the animal control authority for Hanover County, the raccoon smashed bottles of alcohol and drank their contents until he passed out on the floor of the restroom.

Animal control officials took him back to a county shelter until he sobered up. After a few hours of sleep, the raccoon woke up apparently uninjured. The human authorities then released the raccoon back into the wild to commit additional poor life choices.

-via @sunnyright | Photos: Hanover County Animal Control and Shelter

UPDATE: 12/4/2025:


New Combat Technique: Sword Kicking

Dave Locke is not just an acrobat; he's an "acrobat conceptor." He's a master athlete and performer with experience in Cirque du Soleil, using the cyr wheel and the trampwall (a trampoline arranged vertically rather than horizontally).

How is he a conceptor? Locke is devising original acrobatic activities, such as kicking a sword into a target. Most people (well, Miss Cellania and I) use our hands when wielding swords, but Locke can shoot a sword in preferred directions with sidekicks.

-via Born in Space


The Art of the Christmas Tree in Japan

Christmas is a totally secular holiday in Japan, and the symbol of the Christmas tree has become a medium for some spectacular public art installations. Spoon & Tamago have selected their favorite Christmas trees of 2025 from Tokyo and Osaka. There are five of them, and some stretch the definition of "tree," although the conical shape is unmistakable. 

The tree shown above was designed by Takahiro Matsuo of the art studio LUCENT, and is on display at Omotesando Hills in Tokyo. It contains a thousand prisms to reflect and multiply light. The ring near the top is Matsuo’s invention called Kinetic Light Vision (KLV), which produces the mid-air points of light you see surrounding the tree. And those lights dance. You can see a video of the device in action at the link, as well as four other spectacular Christmas tree art installations. If that's not enough, there are links at the bottom for the best Christmas trees from previous years. -via Everlasting Blort 


An Honest Trailer for Both Kill Bill Movies

The movie Kill Bill: Volume 1 came out in 2003, and Kill Bill: Volume 2 followed in 2004 to complete the story. And now this Friday, both return to theaters together in a four hour and 35 minute marathon called Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair

Both the earlier movies were box office hits and became martial arts classics. But it's been a long time, and if you are young, your parents didn't let you see these movies in a theater the first time around. Is it worth sitting that long to see both volumes on the big screen? Kill Bill is the saga of a woman done wrong who furiously gets her revenge. It has plenty of over-the-top violence and the many quirks that brand it as a Quentin Tarantino flick, which becomes obvious in this Honest Trailer. The Whole Bloody Affair will also feature a new anime sequence, and there's an intermission between the two parts, so you can stretch your legs and relieve your bladder.    


News Anchor Reads Mean Comments about Herself in Her News Anchor Voice

Carissa Codel is a professional journalist who began working in that field while still an undergraduate student at Missouri State University. She has thrived professionally, won multiple awards, and is now the anchor for KOLR10 News in Springfield, Missouri.

She attracts a lot of attention for her body of work...and her body. Some of the comments that people leave about her physique are complimentary. Others are not. Codel takes them all in stride and frequently reads them out loud in her level, carefully enunciating, professional newscaster voice.

-via Tara Bull


Level Devil is a Thoroughly Maddening Yet Hilarious Game

Level Devil seems like a simple run-and-jump game. I began it thinking that the goal is to reach the doorway that will take you to the next level, but you don't know how many times you have to complete the task to advance. You have to die a few times to figure out your strategy. And there's no limit to how many times you can die and come back, which soon becomes hilarious.

As you progress, you start to think the goal of the game is to see how many ways this game can kill you over and over again. It's called Level Devil because it's diabolical. Just when you think you've got it figured out, you are suddenly confronted with a new way to fail. You can almost picture a demon watching you from somewhere, laughing at your miserable attempts to outsmart a simple run-and-jump game that will sneak up and destroy you before you can even blink. -via kottke 


Gingerbread Cleveland Public Library

Sarah Wagner is a gingerbread artist known in Cleveland for recreating landmarks of that city that she calls home. In the past, she's made highly realistic models of the Westside Market, Terminal Tower, and East Fourth Street.

Cleveland magazine reports that, this year, Wagner made a scale model of the central Cleveland Public Library. This was a commission by that institution, which provided Wagner with architectural plans necessary to recreate the headquarters. Baking and assembly took a full month, as well as 25 pounds of flour and 3 pounds of Isomalt, which is the substance used to create the windows. It measures 32 by 38 inches.

The model is now on display at the main library.

-via reddit


Survivorship Bias Cookies

Do you recognize the design of this cookie?

It's a reference to a meme illustrating suvivorship bias.

During World War II, the US Navy asked statistician Abraham Wald to suggest where armor should be added to planes based upon a data set consisting of where USN planes had been damaged by enemy fire. Counterinuitively, Wald proposed armoring spots that were rarely damaged.

Why? Because Wald realized that the planes that had been hit there were unable to return to aircraft carriers and bases. By focusing on the planes that had returned to base damaged, the USN engaged in survivorship bias.

Bluesky user Stephanie made shortbread cookies resembling the meme.

-via Super Punch


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