Pop culture
Bob Dylan Traded This Painting in Exchange for an Astrology Reading
The musician created the artwork in the 1960s while recovering from a motorcycle accident in Woodstock, New York
How a Bottle Served as a Living Room—and a Prison—for a 2,000-Year-Old Genie
The vessel from 1960s sitcom “I Dream of Jeannie,” now on display at the National Museum of American History, could not contain the exuberance of the beloved character
An Absolutely Fabulous Celebration of History’s Greatest Divas
This heady, exquisitely delightful new book reveals the power behind the sequins
These Artworks Explore the Cultural Significance of Hair
A new exhibition at the Heide Museum of Modern Art in Australia examines what hair says about identity, gender, social status and more
Five Movies You Didn't Know Were Filmed in Utah
State officials are staging a year-long exhibition to celebrate 100 years of filmmaking in the state
Spellbinding Cover Art for 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone' Could Break Auction Record
The original watercolor illustration of a young wizard boarding the Hogwarts Express was artist Thomas Taylor's first professional commission
Spend the Night in the Musée d'Orsay's Clock Room on the Evening of the Olympics Opening Ceremony
Airbnb will allow two travelers to book a one-night stay in the storied Paris museum, where they will watch the ceremony from a balcony overlooking the Seine
Original 'Star Trek' Enterprise Model Resurfaces Decades After It Went Missing
The model used in the original series' opening credits is now back with Eugene Roddenberry Jr., the son of the show's creator
Lost Silent Film Featuring Clara Bow Discovered in a $20 Box of Old Reels
Bow, who also serves as inspiration for a new Taylor Swift song, was one of Hollywood's first starlets
Scrabble Introduces a Less Competitive Version of the Classic Word Game
Scrabble Together, now available in Europe, is the first major update to the game in more than 75 years
The First Issue of Superman Just Became the Most Valuable Comic Book in the World
An original copy of 1938's "Action Comics No. 1" sold for a record-breaking $6 million at auction
Song Lyrics Have Become Angrier, Simpler and More Repetitive, Scientists Find
An analysis of more than 12,000 rap, pop, country, rock and R&B songs from the past 50 years shows more emotional and straightforward lyrics
Floating Board From 'Titanic' Sells for Over $700,000
The infamous prop has long been the source of heated debate: Did Jack really have to die?
158 Cherry Blossom Trees Will Be Cut Down in D.C. in Effort to Withstand Sea-Level Rise
The National Park Service's restoration project will reconstruct a protective seawall and plant 274 new cherry blossoms when work is complete
Goodwill Listed This Rare Gold Lego Piece for $14.95. It Sold for $18,101
Lego created just 30 of the 14-karat gold Kanohi Hau masks for a giveaway in 2001
Before Beyonce and Taylor Swift Ran the World, There Was Joan Baez
Today’s artists—especially women—are sometimes criticized for speaking out, but for Baez, art and activism were indivisible
How a Century of Black Westerns Shaped Movie History
Mario Van Peebles' "Outlaw Posse" is the latest attempt to correct the erasure of people of color from the classic cinema genre
Don Henley of the Eagles Testifies That 'Very Personal' Handwritten Lyrics Were Stolen
The musician learned about the alleged theft when the drafts started appearing at auctions in 2012
At the Swiftposium, Scholars Gather to Analyze a Superstar's Astonishing Influence
The University of Melbourne welcomed academics from all over the world for its Taylor Swift conference
The Oscars Are Adding a New Award for Casting
When it debuts in 2026, the casting award will be the Academy's first new category since 2001
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