Maria Rendo

  • Chemical engineer breaks down the science behind the ‘impossible’ ice cream transfer trick
    How do both ice creams transfer equally?Photo credit: The Action Lab/YouTube
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    Chemical engineer breaks down the science behind the ‘impossible’ ice cream transfer trick

    There’s a “surprisingly deep” explanation for how chocolate and vanilla transfer simultaneously.

    We live in an era of incredible scientific advancements, from genetic editing to immunotherapy to nanotechnology. And yet, even the simplest science experiments using basic materials can still blow our minds.

    People have been sharing what happens when you swipe two ice cream scoops against each other, with an unexpected result. It’s not surprising that some of one flavor transfers to the other. What’s weird is that both scoops transfer to each other, as if there’s an equal exchange of matter. How does that work?

    Dr. James Orgill, a chemical engineer behind The Action Lab, explains the “surprisingly deep” physics principle behind the “impossible” transfer. Part of his explanation gets highly technical, involving quantum mechanics and thermodynamics. But it essentially comes down to the difference between “mixing” and “stirring.”

    Orgill explains that when he first saw the ice cream transfer, he thought the chocolate and vanilla were mixing at the surface. “But the problem is that you can see that it’s not like a chocolatey-vanilla at the contact point,” he says in a YouTube video. “There’s still a clear layer of chocolate and a clear layer of vanilla.” 

    What’s actually happening relates to what Orgill calls “a surprisingly deep idea in physics,” which is how stirring and true mixing differ.

    “This difference at first seems pedantic, but you’ll see that it turns out to be a line between reversibility and irreversibility, between systems that remember their past and systems that forget it forever,” he explains. “And once you see it, it explains not just the ice cream, but everything from fluid flows to entropy itself.”

    Orgill demonstrates how stirring works by injecting blobs of dye into corn syrup suspended between two cylinders. As one cylinder spins, the colors stretch into layers and begin to mix. But when the motion is reversed, the dye blobs go back to their original places and shapes.

    “This tells us something important about stirring,” he says. “It is reversible in principle. As long as material is only being stretched and rearranged into layers, the persistent state still contains a record of the past. Stirred fluids can act like history books.”

    A scientist holds a flask in which blue dye has been dropped into a red liquid
    Stirring is reversible in theory. Mixing, not so much. Photo credit: Canva

    However, true mixing is a different story. The dye demonstration illustrates the principle of reversibility, but when you stir dye into a glass of water, it mixes so thoroughly that the process can’t be physically reversed.

    “Over time, especially when you’ve created lots of thin layers with lots of surface area, diffusion smooths everything out,” Orgill explains. “Diffusion is the random thermal motion of atoms and molecules. Statistically, two initially separate groups of particles will spread out and interpenetrate. Once that happens, there’s no way to reverse the process. True mixing has actually occurred.”

    Orgill then delves into the weeds of entropy, quantum mechanics, Loschmidt’s paradox, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, and the irreversibility of time. What does that have to do with ice cream? Well, not much, thankfully.

    Two waffle cones, one holding green ice cream and one holding red ice cream
    Swipe two ice creams together and see what happens. Photo credit: Canva

    “Luckily, our original ice cream experiment turns out to be a reversible process,” Orgill says. “What’s happening there is not mixing at the surface.”

    Using two pieces of Play-Doh, Orgill shows that the ice cream scoops are actually “gouging” one another, not mixing.

    “Imagine two spheres sliding past each other,” he explains. “As they pass, each sphere overhangs the edge of the other just a little bit. That overhanging section gets stressed out and torn loose. So instead of atoms diffusing together, the chocolate scoop rips a chunk out of the vanilla. And at the same time, the vanilla rips a chunk out of the chocolate. Those chunks get pressed onto the opposite surface at the same contact location. Both sides lose material and both sides gain material in the same spot. They’re not mixing. They’re taking bites out of each other.”

    He explains and demonstrates that the same thing would happen if two planets were to collide. Bringing it back to a much smaller scale, people in the comments also note that the same thing happens when two cars scrape against each other.

    Seeing Orgill’s models makes it easier to understand how such transfers happen. Essentially, the two objects smear a layer (ice cream, paint, or even planetary material) onto each other from opposite directions at the same time.

    From ice cream cones to quantum mechanics to colliding planets—isn’t science fun?

    You can follow The Action Lab on YouTube for more science explanations.

  • Her husband got kissed by a stranger at a bar. Her response got more criticism than the woman who did it.
    A man and a woman talk at a barPhoto credit: Canva
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    Her husband got kissed by a stranger at a bar. Her response got more criticism than the woman who did it.

    A night out in Los Angeles turned into a debate about consent, boundaries, and what it actually means to keep your cool.

    When a drunk woman grabbed her husband’s face and kissed him at a Los Angeles bar, @toastedciabatta stayed cool. No confrontation, no scene. When the woman’s friend rushed over to apologize, she smiled and said, “He’s a hot guy, I get it.” Later, when their groups crossed paths again, she let it go entirely.

    She thought she’d handled it well. Then she went home and couldn’t stop replaying it.

    In a TikTok posted in late August, she walked through the whole night, explaining that as her husband stepped up to order drinks, a woman approached him, held his face, and tried to kiss him on the mouth. He turned away just in time, so it landed on his cheek. The woman walked off. A friend of hers spotted the wife nearby and immediately started apologizing. The wife, not wanting to embarrass anyone, kept things light. The friend apologized again, explaining that her friend was very drunk. The wife told her not to worry about it.

    @rjchild

    Is there a “right” way to handle something like that? Did I completely miss my shining opportunity for a justified bar brawl?! #storytime #fypage #dramatiktok #couples #relationships

    ♬ original sound – RJ

    But something about the moment stuck. Not because she wished she’d gotten angry, she made that clear, but because she felt she’d let something genuinely not okay just dissolve into the noise of a crowded bar. In the video, she said she imagined going back and calmly asking the woman if she remembered what she’d done, and making clear that kissing a stranger without their consent isn’t acceptable regardless of how much you’ve had to drink. “Is there a ‘right’ way to handle something like that?” she asked viewers. “Did I completely miss my shining opportunity for a justified bar brawl?”

    The internet had opinions, and they weren’t all what she might have expected. The Mary Sue covered the response, noting that while some viewers backed her composure, “Girl, you’re GENTLE PARENTING at a BAR???” became something of a rallying cry in the comments. A number of people pointed out that the real issue wasn’t how she handled a social awkwardness but that her husband had been kissed without his consent, full stop, and that framing it as a question of her reaction somewhat missed the point. “He was just assaulted in front of you,” one commenter wrote, “and you just asked like ‘you OK that was weird?’”

    Four women sitting at a bar
    Bar patrons drinking on a busy night. Photo credit: Canva

    Others pushed back on that framing, arguing that the woman was clearly too drunk to have a meaningful conversation and that nothing said in that moment would have landed anyway. “That is a conversation she needs while sober,” one user noted.

    A smaller contingent said they would have handled it very differently. “I probably would not have been that understanding,” wrote @brooklynn_beast. “I’d start swinging.” @birdmo_k was more measured: “It’s assault. I would have called security.”

    The split in the comments is the real story. Most people watching agreed the kissing woman was wrong. What divided them was whether a calm non-reaction is grace under pressure or something closer to normalizing behavior that shouldn’t be normalized.

    For more videos like this, you can follow @toastedsourdoug on TikTok.

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • His last name was spelled backwards on his Facebook Dating profile. Her mom figured out why from the parking lot just in time.
    A woman drives her car on the freeway Photo credit: Canva

    She had a rule about meeting men from the internet: full CIA mode before any date. Look up the name, run it through public records, confirm the person is who they say they are. She’d done it enough times that it was second nature.

    This time, she was running late.

    In a TikTok that has been circulating widely, @maddybingbong walked through what happened when she skipped her usual process and nearly paid for it. She’d matched with a guy on Facebook Dating, they’d exchanged a few messages, and when he asked if she was free that evening she said sure. She got ready, got in the car, and started the 30-minute drive to meet him for dinner.

    woman driving while looking at phone
    Woman driving while texting. Photo credit: Canva

    Her mom, feeling uneasy, started digging while her daughter was on the road.

    There had been one small thing that hadn’t quite registered. When she’d asked the man for his full name, the screenshot from his Facebook profile showed his last name spelled backward. She ran a quick search, found only minor traffic violations, and kept driving. What she hadn’t done was search his actual name.

    Her mom did. Using MyCase.gov, Indiana’s public court records database, she looked him up with the correct spelling and found several charges: battery, strangulation, and multiple counts of breach of privacy.

    The call came just as the daughter was pulling into the parking lot. “Do not go inside,” her mom told her.

    She didn’t. Instead, she called the man directly. She told him her mom had looked him up and found some things. He confirmed the charges were real but tried to minimize them, telling her it wasn’t as serious as it sounded and that she had nothing to worry about. She told him she didn’t know him personally and couldn’t take that on faith. “I’m going home,” she said. “I can’t make that risk.”

    @maddybingbong

    This is from a year ago but I thought I should repost it. You never know who you’re meeting up with if they’re lying.

    ♬ original sound – maddybingbong

    As the Daily Dot reported, she later said in a DM: “All I can say is that it definitely was an eye-opening experience to never let my guard down.”

    Back home, she blocked him on every platform. In the video she pushed back on anyone tempted to frame what she did as standing someone up. She was clear: you don’t owe a stranger your time, your presence, or an explanation. The plans were made, the information changed, and she made a different call.

    The comments filled up with people sharing their own versions of the story and swapping safety tips. Several pointed to public court records databases as an underused resource, and a few others noted that a name spelled backward on a dating profile is itself worth a second look.

    For more dating videos, follow @maddybingbong on TikTok.

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • Communication expert shares 3-2-1 trick to stop rambling when put on the spot
    Women talking outside.Photo credit: August de Richelieu/Pexels

    Being a clear communicator is a powerful social skill. Not only does it build relationships, but it also creates authentic connections.

    But in high-pressure situations, confident speaking can start to crumble—we’ve all been there. For example, when talking to your boss or even on a first date.

    It’s easy to start rambling and jumbling your words. To prevent this, communication expert Vinh Giang shares a clever 3-2-1 speaking trick that can help anyone slow down and communicate clearly and concisely when it matters most.

    What is the 3-2-1 speaking trick?

    According to Giang, it starts with training your brain for moments when you feel put on the spot.

    “When someone asks you a question and you’re not prepared, what happens? Your brain hits the panic button,” he says in a YouTube video.

    As you struggle to verbalize your thoughts, you may start to ramble—which, Giang notes, can lead to frustration and embarrassment. To avoid feeling flustered, he offers a 3-2-1 framework to keep in mind when speaking off the cuff.

    “Without a communication framework to fall back on, your mind goes blank,” he explains.

    https://www.tiktok.com/@askvinh/video/7617451948157046023

    The 3-2-1 framework consists of 3 steps, 2 types, and 1 thing. Using the example of avocados, he explains how it works:

    1 thing

    “The one thing about avocados that I love is that it’s great on a keto diet,” says Giang.

    2 types

    He switches to “ways” instead of “types,” explaining that there are “two ways to eat avocados: you can smash it up or eat it like a fruit [apple].”

    3 steps

    Finally, he explains that there are three steps to preparing avocados: “First step, cut it in half. Step two, mash it up. Step three, salt, pepper, and lemon.”

    How to use the 3-2-1 speaking trick

    Giang shares another example of how to use the 3-2-1 speaking trick, this time using the topic of travel. In a clip from a conference, he invites an audience member to offer three responses for each part. Her answers show how the method works in a real-life scenario:

    1 thing

    “The one thing about travel is it’s magnificent,” the audience member says. “You can go anywhere you want.”

    2 types

    “The two types of travel are: you can travel regionally and you can travel internationally via a plane,” she says.

    3 steps

    “Three steps to travel is plan it, book it, go!” she shares.

    Giang congratulates her, noting, “That’s the difference between being prepared with a framework, because now you’re excited to communicate. When you’re not prepared, you’re not excited—you’re scared. You don’t want to communicate.”

    @askvinh

    The simple solution to stop rambling… If you want to learn what to say when you’re pausing and thinking, you need to learn how to use communication frameworks.

    ♬ original sound – Vinh Giang – Vinh Giang

    Viewers react

    In the comments, people shared their responses to Giang’s video:

    “I’m officially smarter than I was five minutes ago.”

    “For an overthinker, this is gold. Thank you tons.”

    “I’m 40 and honestly, this hits home. I’ve been in situations at work where I froze or rambled because my brain went blank under pressure. The 3-2-1 framework feels so practical and simple to apply—I actually tried it while watching and it gave me structure instantly. Definitely something I’ll practice more in meetings and daily conversations. Thanks for sharing this tool, Vin!”

    “Immediately used this in a daily mundane small talk conversation that I’m having with someone, and I realized it’s not that I don’t like small talk because I’m not interested with someone… It’s because I don’t know how to do it. Managed to turn small talk into a chain of small conversations that led to more concrete discussions. Thanks a lot for this tip!”

    “Yeah. This is a big problem that I have. For years I’ve struggled to communicate properly because my brain goes a thousand miles a minute and my mouth tries to keep up.”

  • One simple question to the hospital’s billing department saved a patient $482
    A man talks on the phone while reviewing a document. Photo credit: Canva

    Many Americans know the anxiety that comes with receiving a medical bill in the mail. According to a 2024 study, nearly 36% of households in the United States have medical debt.

    The same study found that 21% of American households had a past-due medical bill, and 23% reported paying off a medical bill over time. But saving money on medical bills is possible.

    On Reddit, a patient shared how they saved $482 on a medical bill by asking a simple question to their hospital’s billing department after receiving a large bill.

    A real-life story about saving on medical bills

    The patient began by sharing some health background, explaining that in January 2026 they had an outpatient procedure at a regional hospital and “got a bill for like $1,100 after insurance.”

    Like most Americans, they planned to “set up a payment plan and deal with it.”

    But before they did, a conversation with a coworker stopped them in their tracks—and ultimately led to massive savings on the hospital bill.

    The one question to ask to save on medical bills

    They went on to explain that “someone at work told me to always request an itemized bill first, so I did.” The patient called the hospital’s billing department and asked for an itemized bill to review each charge.

    “Got a 6-page document with like 40 line items on it. spent an evening going through it,” they explained. That’s when it hit them: There were multiple errors.

    “Found a charge for anesthesia consultation ($340), which I never had; the procedure was local numbing only,” they wrote. “Also found a duplicate charge for a supply kit listed twice.”

    After calling the billing department to dispute the charges, they said they “expected a fight,” but were told it would be reviewed.

    “Took about 2 weeks and they removed both charges, bill went from $1,100 to $618,” they shared. “Apparently billing errors are insanely common and hospitals count on people just not looking. Call and ask for an itemized bill, not just the summary, the full itemized one. Takes 5 minutes and you might find something.”

    People share their hospital bill disputes

    According to a 2024 study, 1 in 5 Americans reported receiving a medical bill they disagreed with or couldn’t afford, and 61% said they contacted their provider to address their concerns.

    Fellow Redditors also shared stories of how they caught medical bill errors.

    “My daughter was seen in the ER last month and we found a charge for $1235.00 on the itemized bill for ibuprofen. They gave her 2 tablets. The charge should have been $12.35, which is still ridiculous for 2 pills, but I’ll take it.”

    “I had an ear canal infection and went to urgent care. Pretty simple, just needed antibiotics. But then the bill came back as $800 for a Level 3 office visit with moderate medical decision-making. A doctor does not exercise moderate decision making when prescribing the standard antibiotic ear drop. I sent in an appeal and a month later they adjusted it down by $250 to a Level 2 office visit with low medical decision making. The lesson is that whenever you see a code that talks about a level or a difficulty or a complication above the most basic level of care, look into if your care actually justified that upcode.”

    “I always ask for itemized bills. I had shoulder surgery and got SO MANY different bills. One bill just said ‘Hospital Visit’ with no other information and was well over 1000 bucks. I asked for an itemized bill, they never sent it but would call back asking when I was paying the bill. I told them not without an itemized bill. Eventually I got a bill for like 12 dollars. WILD what goes on in the medical billing world.”

    “I had a severe skin reaction. Went to a dermatologist. $400 bill after he literally told me he couldn’t help me. I became allergic to my laundry soap??. Called and complained. Bill canceled. Healthcare in the USA is a joke.”

  • Harvard linguist shares the etymology of the word ‘girl’ and how it evolved into a gendered term
    A group of girls laugh together at school.Photo credit: Canva

    The word “girl” evokes the thought of a female child, while “boy” conjures the thought of a male child. This is true for most people, regardless of their country of origin. But according to Harvard University linguist Sunn m’Cheaux, the word “girl” was originally considered gender-neutral.

    What sparked the revelation was a video showing a woman calling her male friend “girl” during a conversation. The short, seemingly amusing clip sparked a firestorm of comments from men who found the unintentional gaffe insulting. Some men viewed the term as emasculating, while women claimed it was gender-neutral.

    girl, girl etymology, gender neutral, boy, linguist
    Children sitting with their teacher. Photo credit: Canva

    Sunn m’Cheaux originally added his voice by pointing out that when women use the term with men, it reflects a closeness in the friendship.

    “Quick FYI: If you’re in a conversation with a Black woman who inadvertently calls you ‘girl,’ do not get offended. She is not ‘emasculating you’—she’s comfortable with you,” the language expert says in a TikTok video, as women in the comments agree.

    After seeing comments saying that women simply didn’t know the etymology of the word, m’Cheaux jumped back in to break things down. The confusion, he explains, is that the once gender-neutral term became gendered, losing its original meaning. In a follow-up video posted to his social media pages, he explains the etymology of “girl” for naysayers.

    @sunnmcheaux

    Replying to @scope3944 IF YOUR BLACK HG SLIPS & CALLS YOU “GURL!” #education #linguistics #sociolinguistics #aave #weoutchea

    ♬ original sound – Sunn m’Cheaux 🦔

    “The good news is, if you think that most of the women and girls who inadvertently call y’all ‘girl’ don’t actually know the etymology of the word ‘girl,’ you’re probably right,” the linguist says. “Most English speakers don’t know the etymology of the word ‘girl.’ But see, that’s where the bad news comes in for you. You see, the word ‘girl’ was originally gender-neutral. That’s right. For centuries, the word ‘girl’ simply meant a child of either sex.”

    girl, girl etymology, gender neutral, boy, linguist
    A mom plays with her baby. Photo credit: Canva

    He further explains that male children were called “knave girls,” distinguishing them from female children. The word “boy,” on the other hand, originally meant servant. This gender-neutral usage didn’t stop with “girl”—he adds that “man” was also used for both sexes.

    “To distinguish a human female from a human male, that would be a ‘wifman’ for a female,” m’Cheaux explains. “Later, the term ‘wife’ would mean the companion of a man, but you actually didn’t originally have to be the companion of a man to be a ‘wife.’”

    In the video, he also addresses the terms “midwife” and “gossip,” explaining how they became associated with women. He impressed viewers with the impromptu etymology lesson.

    One person writes, “I feel like I just attended a really great lecture and I should probably rewatch and take notes! So much info!”

    Another says, “Oh, how I love these etymology breakdowns!!! So much fun learning how words/language evolve! But I’ont think anybody does this as well as you do.”

    girl, girl etymology, gender neutral, boy, linguist
    Women laughing together. Photo credit: Canva

    “You’ll have to start charging for these seminars. That was at least one credit’s worth of knowledge!” Someone else chimes in.

    “I love this! May I use this in my class when we talk of pronouns and how they have evolved?” an eager professor shares. “Some of my future journalists are battling they/them conundrums outside our Emerson bubble. I’d love to add this to the conversation.”

    “Sir, you make my brain hurt in the best possible way. Appreciate you,” another person notes.

  • Educational space-themed pajamas have 5 glaring flaws any 6-year-old could spot
    Solar system PJs have some questionable science.Photo credit: Impressive_Stress808/Reddit

    Children are all naturally born scientists, with an incredible curiosity about the world around them. As adults, our job is to foster that spark so they can carry it throughout their lives.

    “Kids are sources of chaos and disorder. Get over that fact,” science communicator Neil deGrasse Tyson said on the Impact Theory podcast. “Where does the disorder come from? It’s because they are experimenting with their environment. Everything is new to them, everything. Your job is less to instill curiosity than to make sure you don’t squash what is already there.”

    Another job we have as adults is to make sure children are learning science correctly, which is why a toddler’s pajama shirt featuring the solar system is going viral on Reddit. It seems nobody at the clothing manufacturer took the time to review the science behind the graphic. In fact, it’s safe to say most kids as young as six could easily spot the flaws in the PJs.

    5 mistakes on the shirt that are easy to spot

    1. Jupiter appears on the shirt as spotted, rather than striped as it does through a telescope. Although it’s known for its Great Red Spot, here it looks more like a strawberry.
    2. Saturn appears spotted, like a chocolate chip cookie, rather than banded as it does in real life.
    3. Neptune, a giant ice planet, is shown as cratered, like Mercury.
    4. Mercury, conversely, is shown as a black-and-blue striped planet, more like Neptune.
    5. Uranus is shown as the largest planet in the graphic, but in reality, it is about the same size as Neptune.

    This is total conjecture, but it seems the graphic designer may have mislabeled Mercury as Neptune and Neptune as Mercury.

    The actual solar system

    solar system, planets, sun, earth, science
    The solar system. Photo credit: Canva

    Reddit commenters also pointed out the questionable font, noting that the “o,” with its cursive-style tail, makes the word “moon” look like “Meeh.” And, to get super nitpicky, if this is meant to be an unbiased look at the solar system, why is there only one moon on the shirt when there are hundreds in our solar system, depending on how they’re defined?

    solar system, school project, solar system mode, planets, sun
    A boy making a model of the solar system. Photo credit: Canva

    The PJs’ astronomically incorrect design even bothered those in the scientific community.

    “As a professional science communicator who works a lot with space at this age group, I am disappointed to see an adult get something wrong that any 6-year-old in the U.K. would correct,” Dr. Mark Gallaway told Newsweek.

    Although the shirt may be wrong in many ways, it could be a blessing in disguise. The parent who purchased these PJs now has an opportunity for a teachable moment. They can take the pajamas and compare them to the actual solar system to see where the designer got things right or wrong. It’s also a chance to bring up one of the sad truths about the universe: Pluto isn’t among the PJ planets, because it was demoted. Thanks, Neil deGrasse Tyson.

  • From the Sequoias to ‘huge’ hardware stores, here are 14 U.S. places foreigners dream of visiting
    A forest (left) and a man in a hardware store (right).Photo credit: Canva
    ,

    From the Sequoias to ‘huge’ hardware stores, here are 14 U.S. places foreigners dream of visiting

    “I’d love to go to a Renaissance fair or at least a Medieval Times dinner show.”

    You probably couldn’t pay a Parisian enough money to visit the Eiffel Tower, or an Italian to swing by the Vatican, even though both landmarks are objectively extraordinary. It’s a fact of life that people take for granted what they see every day, no matter how naturally splendid or meticulously crafted it may be. But sometimes an outsider’s appreciation can help you marvel once again at the wonderful things in your own backyard. 

    Recently, non-Americans on Reddit offered this gift by sharing some quintessentially American things they’d like to witness or experience for themselves. At a time when political division is making many Americans feel disillusioned, the conversation offers some timely comfort—and maybe even a renewed sense of hope for the good things the country still has to offer.

    It’s also interesting to see how much American pop culture shapes what visitors find intriguing. Many people suggested fairly mundane things simply because they’ve seen them again and again in American movies and TV shows. For instance, one person mentioned the allure of Chinese takeout because of the iconic white cartons that appear a bajillion American films and television shows.

    Keep scrolling for American things people from outside the country are eager to experience, or grateful to have experienced in their lifetime.

    1. Sequoia National Park and the Grand Canyon 

    America, reddit, culture, travel
    The Grand Canyon at dusk. Photo credit: Canva

    Even Americans agree that these two spots are must-sees.

    “I promise, standing at the base of a giant tree is an experience that cannot be replicated…If you have a chance, learn about the ecology and also about fire history.”

    “As I’m American I always brushed off the Grand Canyon and never planned to see it. I got a random chance on a return trip from Vegas. Do it. See it. I’ve traveled a fair bit around the US and Europe and it remains the most amazing, breathtaking thing I’ve ever seen or experienced.”

    “I’m also an American, and pretty well traveled. The Grand Canyon brought me to tears. It’s one of only two placed I’ve ever gone to twice in the same year because it’s just THAT good. (The second was the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland.)”

    2. The rainforests of the Pacific Northwest

    “I bet they smell AMAZING!!”

    3. The French Quarter in New Orleans

    “Nothing else like it. And you cannot get bad food there unless you just want to eat at McDonalds………”

    4. Savannah, Georgia

    “Savannah is great!! I stayed a couple nights there and always wanted to go back. Do a ghost tour! And a horse carriage tour!”

    5. New England

    America, reddit, culture, travel
    New England trees in autumn. Photo credit: Canva

    “I reallllyyy wanted to go to New England for the longest time lol. Such pretty leaves.”

    6. Sedona, Arizona 

    “A friend said it was stunning but disconcerting because at times she felt things were off kilter. I like weird places and the geographic nature appeals, all those red rocks!!”

    7. San Francisco

    “I’m 30, an American and just landed in San Francisco this morning. It’s my first time here and I’m in love. Such a cool place. I’m actually moving here soon. Doesn’t feel real at all!”

    8. Tornado areas

    america, reddit, culture, travel
    A tornado in an open field. Photo credit: Canva

    “I lived in Mexico and Central America for many years, and one thing people kept asking me about was tornadoes…They thought it was an American thing, and a very common occurrence. Maybe because of Wizard or Oz. I had to sadly tell them I’ve never seen a tornado in my life. I’m from the west coast. They were definitely very disappointed. I also realized they don’t understand how dangerous they are. They thought it was more like lightning. Just happening in the background while people got on with their day.”

    9. Gigantic stores

    “Honestly just want to hit up some of those huge pc hardware stores…we don’t have anything like that scale here.”

    “I wanna visit a Walmart. The closest thing to a giant store like that are some larger supermarket chains in Germany … In the Netherlands we don’t really have large stores where you can find EVERYTHING you wish for.”

    10. Chinese takeout

    “I have a good friend from Switzerland and the first thing she wanted to experience was getting to-go Chinese food and eating it out of those white cartons with chopsticks…I guess the whole Chinese food take-out in those particular cartons is pretty American, kinda like fortune cookies.”

    11. Fast food restaurants

    “I’m American, but my Irish colleague was so excited to try a Baconator from Wendy’s when he visited.”

    “When my German friend visited she begged to visit In-N-Out because it looked ‘so fancy.’ She loved it. I surprised her by buying her a tshirt from there too.”

    12. Items/places made famous by movies and TV

    “Australian here, and I’ve always wanted to see a big yellow school bus, after being terrified of them in the opening scene of A Nightmare on Elm Street 2”

    “I just wanna walk into a 24/7 diner at 3am and get a giant milkshake. No reason, just movie vibes.”

    “My friend from England visited New York for business and thought it was wild that to-go coffee was served in the same blue and white cups she had seen on Law & Order.”

    13. Halloween festivities

    “I absolutely love American culture for Halloween, all those decorations, costumes and just the whole vibe about this holiday is something I would like to experience.”

    “One thing that I really love about American culture is Halloween haunted houses. There’s haunted houses…There’s haunted hayrides, some where zombies attack you, and you have to try to get them with paintball guns.There’s haunted 5k runs, kids haunted houses (Not scary, just silly), even haunted car washes.”

    14. Events that celebrate olden times

    “I’d love to go to a Renaissance fair or at least a Medieval Times dinner show.”

    Finally, people seem really eager to try rhubarb pie. Honestly, who can blame them?

Communication

Harvard linguist shares the etymology of the word ‘girl’ and how it evolved into a gendered term

Science

Educational space-themed pajamas have 5 glaring flaws any 6-year-old could spot

Travel

From the Sequoias to ‘huge’ hardware stores, here are 14 U.S. places foreigners dream of visiting

Generations

‘Cat’s Cradle’ video has people pondering how trends went viral before the Internet