The National School Lunch Program came about when President Harry Truman signed it into law in 1946. That may seem to be the entire story in a nutshell, but the federal government jumped on the idea at least 50 years after it really started, with private, municipal, and state programs. The idea of children going to school with nothing to eat for six or seven hours sounds awful to us now, but that's the way it was before reform programs began in the late 19th century. Sure, some kids brought lunch or went home to eat, but many just did without because their families were poor.
The women's reform groups, the same activists who advocated for women's suffrage and alcohol prohibition, organized local support for hot lunches served at school. The local pilot programs, paid for by charities and served by volunteers, showed results immediately as children gained weight and earned better grades. The menus from these early programs show that meat was not served in order to keep costs down. Read about the early efforts that led to American school lunches at Fishwrap. -via Strange Company
(Image source: Library of Congress)
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You might think it's still early in the year to be posting about bats, but you know how Halloween creep is. Some people celebrate their creepy side all year round. For me, bats are a summertime thing, and they've just now abandoned my house to migrate south for the winter. At any rate, bats are fascinating once you get over the ick factor.
Bats are masters at flying, although they do it differently from birds. They aren't all that great at walking, but they try. Some can even swim! That phrase "blind as a bat" doesn't mean anything, because bats can see quite well, thank you. They only use echolocation because they fly in the dark. There are so many species of bat that their specialized diets cover just about anything available, which means their biology differs greatly as well.
This video contains NSFW language. There's a 65-second skippable ad at 5:40
In 1899, a bar in San Francisco unveiled a new idea to capture customers' money. It was a coin-operated phonograph that would play a song on a wax cylinder. The sound was lousy, but that was the beginning of what we later came to know as the jukebox. In 1927, the first such vending machine with multiple records and amplified sound came out, and America fell in love with the jukebox.
Playing a song on a jukebox was much cheaper than buying records, much less the equipment to play them on. But the real genius was the machine's ability to tabulate how many times a song was played, and therefore how popular it was. Radio didn't keep track of such things in the 1920s, but caught on eventually. Meanwhile, the Mafia got involved, renting out machines and pushing songs from the studios they also owned. By the early 1940s, there were half a million jukeboxes around the country. But they really exploded after World War II, just in time to track the popularity of a new genre of music called rock and roll. Read up on the history of the jukebox at Smithsonian.
(Image credit: Ethan Long)
Freddie Mercury reportedly once said, "Do what you want with my music darling, just don't make it boring." This is anything but.
The Ndlovu Youth Choir was formed in 2009 at a childcare facility in Elandsdoorn, Limpopo, South Africa. They are all grown up now, but are not about to change the name. They released their first album in 2019 after appearing on the TV competition show America's Got Talent, when they made it to the final round.
The Ndlovu Youth Choir got authorization from Queen to cover "Bohemian Rhapsody" in the isiZulu language of the Zulu people of South Africa. Or partially, because some of the song is in English. It is also partially a cappella, with a band joining in halfway through. The singing is sublime, the staging is sumptuous, and the video is pure eye candy. You can see more from the Ndlovu Youth Choir at their YouTube channel. -via Damn Interesting
The headstone you see above stands in Rushes Cemetery in Wellesley, Ontario. Underneath are buried Henrietta Bean and Susanna Bean, who were not sisters, but the first two wives of Samuel Bean. The women did not know each other, yet share a grave. But what is all that cryptic writing? The stone sat for more than 100 years while people tried to decipher the code. So many took rubbings that the stone became illegible and had to be replaced. Finally the code was cracked in the 1970s. You can read what it says at Atlas Obscura.
But why did Dr. Bean bury two wives in the same grave? He married Henrietta in 1865, and she died that same year after seven months of marriage. No cause of death was recorded. The next year, Bean married Susanna, who died after only ten months of marriage. Again, no cause of death was recorded. Samuel Bean married a third time and had five children, but by then he'd given up practicing medicine and became a man of the cloth. A bit of historical digging shows that Dr. Bean may not have been a qualified physician at all, which raises more questions than it answers. -Thanks, WTM!
(Image credit: Mac Armstrong)
Nordic people are known for growing tall, but Jóhann Kristinn Pétursson was an outlier even in his native Iceland. Born in 1913, Pétursson was a normal child until puberty pulled a fast one. At 15, he started growing quickly, and in just a few years he had reached the height of 7 feet, 8 inches (2.34 meters). All his family, including eight siblings, were of average height. Pétursson had trouble finding a job where he would fit in, so he decided to make a living as an exhibition in 1934. In other words, he ran away to join the circus.
Pétursson exhibited himself in various European countries until after World War II, when he was discovered by the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus. He moved to the US in 1948 and became known as The Viking Giant or sometimes The Icelandic Giant. Pétursson was not considered to have acromegaly, as his body was perfectly proportioned, just big. He weighed over 350 pounds, which made walking difficult. Read about the career of the Viking Giant and see lots of pictures at Vintage Everday. -via Memo of the Air
After many recent videos designed to scare the pants off viewers, Kurzgezagt finally gives us a lighthearted yet interesting video with a look at the sunfish. How dumb can this fish be, compared to other fish in the sea? It's a pretty low bar, so it really doesn't matter, but gives them a great excuse to use all the stupidity jokes they have without hurting someone's feelings. The story of the sunfish is really about the many ways it differs from other fish in its bizarre adaptations in filling a unique niche in the ecosystem.
The sunfish took a left turn in the development of their biology. They do all the fish things -eat, reproduce, and avoid predators- the hard way. But somehow it works for them, which is why they've been around for so long. Who are we to argue with Mother Nature? This video is 8:45; the rest is advertising. -via Laughing Squid
Metropolis is a major city in the US where Superman fights crime. The fictional city was always meant to be generic, formed from "metro," meaning city, and "polis," meaning city. But as children reading comic books, we always saw it as New York City. You might be surprised to learn that in the earliest Superman comic book, Clark Kent lived and worked in Cleveland. After relocating to the fictional Metropolis, clues in the comics pointed to it being New York, and it was explained that Metropolis was near Gotham City. Both cities later moved to different states.
The 2013 movie Man of Steel seemed to place Metropolis in Chicago. But the 2025 Superman has numerous clues that Metropolis is now in Delaware. The map above, enlarged in this reddit post, appears briefly in the film. The city is situated by Delaware Bay. The streets are named after people who worked on the film or on other Superman movies. It is also stamped with "Greater Cleveland Partnership." Those who know recognize a lot of Cleveland in the film, because a lot of it was filmed there. So why Delaware? Read the history of the city that moves from place to place at Big Think.
Humans as a whole tend to distrust anything new, or anything outside their communities' long-held traditions. Those in power felt particularly threatened by anything outside the norm, because people willing to think outside the box or try something new might just be a threat to them. And in many bygone societies, the punishment might be death. YouTuber Chill Dude Explains (previously at Neatorama) has eleven examples of things that are commonplace today, but were once a threat to civilization. Not all of them would necessarily lead to a death sentence, but they were pretty serious transgressions. Well, maybe not potatoes- the consequence of death was natural if you didn't know how to use them properly. Some of these activities could be overlooked on their own, but were used as additional evidence in a witchcraft trial, which led to death. There is a serious lack of dates connected to each story, and a location is rare, but I've posted about enough of these to know they are real.
Many people consider fall the best of seasons because we get relief from the heat and see the kids go back to school where they belong. And of course there's Halloween. But when you think about it, the whole season is full of traditions, from bonfires to football to Black Friday shopping. Some are ancient while others were dreamed up fairly recently because anything that's fun tends to be repeated. Many came out of harvest festivals as a way to show off and indulge in a bountiful crop of one sort or another. Others needs some further explanation. For example, the US holds elections on the first Tuesday in November because that made it convenient for farmers to participate. Black Friday is said to be the day that business are finally "in the black" for the year and the rest is profit, but that's not the origin of the tradition or the term. Read about 25 autumn traditions and where they came from at Mental Floss.
(Image credit: Caleb Zahnd)
The movie Superman will always be referred to as James Gunn's Superman or Superman 2025 to distinguish it from the other movies, TV shows, games, and other media with the same simple title. All of them expected to be the definitive version when they came out. This one was only released about seven weeks ago, so you will be forgiven if you intend to see it but haven't yet. According to this Honest Trailer, it's a lot. The first Superman movie specifically designed for Generation Alpha, it is full of social media and fake news. Supes and Lex Luthor aren't carrying the picture alone, though- there's a whole new roster of characters with super powers to meet, both good guys and bad guys, plus monsters, and a dog who steals the show. Screen Junkies pokes fun at Superman, but you get the idea that they enjoyed watching it. It's available for digital download now, and will be on DVD and blu-ray later this month.
The 25 Greatest Sports Movies of All Time, Ranked https://t.co/6Gd0vggsMj
— The Hollywood Reporter (@THR) August 21, 2025
The latest "list we can all argue about" gives us the 25 greatest sports movies of all time. There are a lot of truly great movies on the list, but they should have made it a list of 50, because everyone has a favorite that's not included. The movies that didn't make the list include Chariots of Fire, The Natural, Field of Dreams, Bend it Like Beckham, Happy Gilmore, The Mighty Ducks, Caddyshack, Cool Runnings, Major League, Miracle, Rudy, North Dallas Forty, The Karate Kid, and I, Tonya. Yes, there are a lot of sports movies.
I'm sure you'll disagree about some of the rankings. You can quibble with the definition of "sports" for this list. Cheerleading, okay, but is pool really a sport? You can also quibble about the definition of "movie," since one entry was made in five parts to be shown on TV. Now that we've gotten those arguments out of the way, go see the list of the 25 greatest sports movies at The Hollywood Reporter and find something you'll want to watch or rewatch tonight. -via Metafilter
Istanbul is famous for its many street cats, but Casablanca in Morocco also has thousands of technically homeless cats. And like Istanbul, they are fed and treated well so they are quite friendly to strangers.
Dr. Meryem Imrani runs a veterinary clinic in Casablanca. A cat came to the clinic by himself when he wasn't feeling well. Maybe someone in the neighborhood steered him in the right direction, or maybe he just knew it was the right place. In any case, Imrani treated him for a viral infection and nursed him back to health, and Rico never left. Instead, he settled in as a clinic cat and started taking care of feline patients himself. Rico turned out to be very social and empathetic to clinic patients, at least the cats, calming their fears, grooming them, keeping them company overnight. He even donated his blood at one point. Rico has found his calling.
You can see more of Rico and Imrani's patients at Instagram.
Here's a kind of internet post you might find on a holiday when no one feels like working, and Labor Day would be that holiday. Cracked found a reddit post asking for examples of badass heroes (or otherwise brave interesting people) of history that few people have heard of. Reading through the entries, I recognized some of these that have been featured right here at Neatorama. Unfortunately, the reddit post is seven years old and there's no link to it. The entries on the list are screenshots, so any links that were originally provided are not there. Well, it's a holiday and I have nothing better to do, so I looked up every one of them for you. Go read the short versions of the stories at Cracked, and if some name compels you to find out more, you can follow these links.
29. Digby Tatham-Warter
28. Subutai
27. Roman von Ungern-Sternberg
26. The Berserker of Stamford Bridge
25. Mannerheim
24. Michael I of Romania
23. Zenobia
22. Olga of Kiev
21. Vera Atkins
20. Carolus Rex
19. Chiune Sugihara
18. Julie d'Aubigny
17. Phùng Thị Chính
16. Wojtek
15. Miyamoto Musashi
14. Bass Reeves
13. Exekias
12. Mary Elizabeth Bowser
11. Yi Sun-Shin
10. Tokugawa Ieyasu
9. Vasil Levski
8. Witold Pilecki
7. Benkei
6. Mariya Oktyabrskaya
5. Mad Jack Churchill
4. Lucrezia Tornabuoni
3. Bertha Benz
2. Ching Shih
1. Ada Lovelace
This should keep you busy for a while.
Eric posts videos about his hobby of restoring rusty antique tools, and has built quite a following over the years. However, the latest video on his channel Hand Tool Rescue, months in the making, veered off into left field. He had found a free packet of seeds distributed in a seed catalog issued in 1926 (so the seeds were actually formed from 1925 tomatoes). Could he get them to germinate? His regular viewers were shocked when he revealed early in the video that he has a PhD in plant science, sparking comments about this being the worst tool restoration video yet.
The video is long, 24 minutes, but often funny and you can skip through if you don't want to learn all about his experiments with different germination media and his various failures and successes. But if you watch the whole thing, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat rooting for the survival of a (spoiler alert) single tomato seedling. -via Metafilter