Bar Fight: When ‘Cheers’ Robots Took Over for the Actors
Animatronic versions of bar patrons Norm and Cliff made two actors named George and John very unhappy.
Animatronic versions of bar patrons Norm and Cliff made two actors named George and John very unhappy.
National Park rules go beyond the general Leave No Trace guidelines. These surprising cover everything from wildlife to waste.
Do you feel wronged by A&W? You might be entitled to compensation.
Back in 1919, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. sort of made it seem like it was against the law to yell “fire“ while in a crowded theater, so we understand if you’re confused.
Is a hot dog a sandwich? What about a burrito? It depends on whom you ask—and what state you live in.
When a baby is born on an international flight, where the plane is registered and the airspace it’s in can determine the child’s citizenship.
Speeders on targeted stretches of road are monitored from the ground and from the sky.
A CIA official explains the 3-1-1 rule and the lasting influence of Operation Overt.
It’s for your own good—or at least that’s the theory.
While Judith Sheindlin was once a real, live judge, she’s not acting as one on her show.
Controversy over red dye no. 3 could soon spill over into the candy aisle.
Toblerone is no longer Swiss enough for the Swiss mountain peak in its logo.
You go about your day trying to be a good citizen. Little did you know that your bingo game can't last more than five hours.
Many people use the terms interchangeably, but there’s a substantial difference between the two methods of incarceration.
Shark-related tourist activities are now illegal in Mexico’s Isla Guadalupe Biosphere Reserve—a hotspot for great whites.
Harried judges in Manhattan and elsewhere hear cases into the early morning hours, including allegations of cleaver attacks.
IKEA is beloved around the world, but there’s at least one place where it’s illegal to name your baby after the furniture store: Its home country of Sweden.
People legally change their first, middle, or last names for a variety of reasons. So what’s in a name (change)? A whole lot of paperwork.
Thanks to a stringent new FDA mandate, food suppliers are now adding sesame to products that didn’t previously contain it.
John Leonard’s demand was simple. All he wanted was for Pepsi to deliver the Harriet jet he believed they had promised. In 1996, Leonard, then a 21-year-old col
Super-recognizers have a rare and uncanny ability to remember faces—a skill that’s estimated to affect just 1 to 2 percent of the population.
Fellow queens of Christmas Darlene Love and Elizabeth Chan have thoughts.
The woman known as "Jane Roe" left an enormous mark on the nation’s political landscape—one that’s still at the fore a half-century later.
The statute targets cars blaring music that can be heard 25 feet away. Critics say it's just a sneaky way to pull suspicious vehicles over.