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As anyone who grew up in the early 2000s knows, Starbucks red cups were an absolute hallmark of the holidays. Truly, there was nothing like begging your mom to drop you off at the mall so you ...
If you weren't busy watching CNN in the 1980s, you had another brand-new option: Music Television, or MTV. The first music video, fittingly, was The Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star."
1941: Cheerios. One of America's most ubiquitous breakfast cereals first appeared on grocery shelves not as Cheerios but "Cheerioats." General Mills aimed to highlight the cereal's main ingredient ...
A 2011 New York Times article reported that there was no hit toy that year, although the piece did note that these gals were "sold out or hard to find in some parts of the country." The plastic ...
October 7, 1963: U.S. joins ban of atmospheric nuclear testing October 9, 1963: More than 2,000 in Italy killed by overflow of the Vajont Dam October 26, 1963: Sub-launched nuclear missiles can now strike target "anywhere on Earth" October 31, 1963: 74 killed in Coliseum explosion in Indianapolis
Here is the highest-grossing movie from the year you were born. Note: The box office sums are not adjusted for inflation, and a few years are missing because of a lack of data. Public Domain ...
March 28 – Ban Johnson, baseball executive (born 1864) March 31 – Knute Rockne, football coach (born 1888) April 1 – Macklyn Arbuckle, actor (born 1866) [31] April 9 – Nicholas Longworth, politician, Speaker of the House (born 1869) April 17 – Ernesto Rossi, racketeer (born 1903) [32] April 26 – George Herbert Mead, philosopher ...
$52 million. Disney’s second animated feature film (following 1937’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” $14.4 million), wasn’t an immediate hit but became successful through re-releases.