We're suckers for irreverent portrayals of our founding fathers. The Cox and Combes Washington video is an office favorite. Drunk History may well give it a run for its money.
UPDATE: This is too hilarious.
We're suckers for irreverent portrayals of our founding fathers. The Cox and Combes Washington video is an office favorite. Drunk History may well give it a run for its money.
UPDATE: This is too hilarious.
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Sponsored: This Mother's Day, Honor Moms Worldwide
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What's Wrong With This Picture? When Juxtaposing Past and Present Sends the Wrong Message
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A 'Talk Show' Uses Humor to Inform Domestic Workers About Their Rights
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Ethical Style: Vogue's Ban on Underage, Unhealthy Models Won't Solve Its Image Problem
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Dude, Where's My IPO? The Groupon Founder's Lessons for Facebook
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork

We always suspected that whisky was part of the solution.

New 2009 data shows that the "drunkest" cities in America are also some of the coldest—though drinking still doesn't warm you up.

A writer asks us to stop ignoring the fact that the civil rights leader was a human being.

Does the teacher in your life need a little help integrating black history into a packed school day? We have the resources she needs.

Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns talks to GOOD about his best drinking story, his new documentary Prohibition, and American drinking culture.

GOOD's favorite sexually-active women share their sad, hilarious, and uplifting attempts to secure emergency contraception.
From the earliest cave sketch to the latest MoMa escapade.
In case you're still really confused about your Middle East history (and, really, who isn't), check out this amazing animated map that details...
In our new issue, we profile Bruce Bueno de Mesquita--who essentially maintains that mathematics can be used to predict the future. Of course, the...
Bono has gone from consummate rock star to passionate advocate for change, gaining audience with the world's leaders and a reputation for...
A short history of black gold, from the ancient Persian army's flaming oil-dipped arrows to today's piercing pain at the pump.
Should we save the imperiled homes of our greatest authors? Kate Chopin's house burned down last week. It is tempting to blame Sam Pulsifer,...
There are some 600 million cars in the world. Airports in the United States launch tens of millions of flights every year. As a society, we've...
Charting the evolution of a gender-hopping, meaning-changing, spelling-flexible word People fear, loathe, and ignore change. The term...
OK, first, a Belgian company called InBev up and buys Anheuser-Busch. Now, a Belgian inventor named Paul Otlet has invented the internet in 1934....
From Kennedy's executive order 10925 to 2006's Michigan Civil Rights Initiative: A short history of the struggle for fairness in education.
1624 – The first known prefab, a panelized wood house, is shipped from England to Massachusetts as housing for a fishing fleet. 1849 – Kit...
Highlights from the history of Earth Day, and some legislative victories it helped enable. For a more complete list, visit the Environmental...

The recently abandoned Republican efforts to distinguish between "rape" and "forcible rape" sheds light on the word's perceived shades of gray.
Filmmaker Stefan Nadelman has created a condensed history of international warfare, from World War II to the present, "acted" entirely by national...
