How Eclipse Chasers Are Putting a Small Kentucky Town on the Map

Hopkinsville sits 11 miles from where the sun, moon and earth will form a straight line during this summer’s total solar eclipse. Locals predict that the 33,000 person town’s position will attract enough stargazers to triple its existence. As any Olympic city can tell you, popularity comes with a cost.

Source: Mental Floss
Published: Jun 30, 2017
Length: 27 minutes (6,823 words)

The Tupperware Queen

How an Eisenhower-era single mom created the “Tupperware party,” launching a plastic food-storage empire.

Author: Jen Doll
Source: Mental Floss
Published: Nov 1, 2014
Length: 13 minutes (3,387 words)

The Complete History of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

How two comic-book artists created the characters beloved by kids during the 1980s and ’90s. The original turtles weren’t so cuddly:

“The original Mirage comic book really wasn’t made for youngsters. The Turtles diced up enemies while spouting the occasional curse word, and one of the Turtles’ allies was hockey mask-wearing vigilante Casey Jones, who beat down even low-level crooks with baseball bats and hockey sticks. But when Playmates Toys expressed interest in producing TMNT action figures in 1986 (we’ll get to those), the comic’s PG-13 attitude wouldn’t fit Playmates’ 4-8 year old target audience. In addition, part of Playmates’ marketing was an animated cartoon, which had to pass television censors. So to make the Turtles viable for the younger set, the Turtles had to soften up.

“Among other changes, the Turtles became wise-cracking jokers obsessed with pizza, the Shredder became a typical bumbling cartoon villain, members of the Foot Clan were now robots so parents wouldn’t complain that the Turtles were too violent, and instead of ‘Damn,’ the Turtles shouted easily-marketable catchphrases like, ‘Turtle Power!’ and ‘Cowabunga!'”

Author: Rob Lammle
Source: Mental Floss
Published: Jun 7, 2012
Length: 12 minutes (3,018 words)