Sinopsis
Cool Weird Awesome carves out a few minutes each day for the great stuff. The stuff we all need so we don't think the world has gone completely crazy.
Episodios
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The BBC Once Reported That Cows Might Have Accents
09/07/2025 Duración: 03minFor Cow Appreciation Day, a look at the time in 2006 that news reports made it sound like scientists had proven that cows had regional accents like people do, only the story was a little more complicated than that. Plus: Solstice 2.0 is a kinetic clock that changes shape as the day goes on. Cows also 'have regional accents' (BBC)It's always silly season in the (BBC) science section (Language Log) Mesmerizing Kinetic Clock Expands and Contracts With the Passage of Time (My Modern Met)Back our show on Patreon and we’ll keep you up to date on the latest cow accent news!
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A Shop In Small-Town Nebraska Gave The World The Tin Roof Sundae
08/07/2025 Duración: 03minIt's National Ice Cream Sundae Day, which might be a good day to visit Potter, Nebraska, the birthplace of the Tin Roof Sundae. Plus: Roswell, New Mexico is very popular with UFO tourists, but it's also home to the Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum. Why Is It Called Tin Roof Sundae? (Chowhound) The Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum of Roswell, NM, is filled with wonderful things (Boing Boing)Treat yourself! Back this show on Patreon
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Tiny Swarms Of Robots Might Help Us Get Through Sinus Infections
07/07/2025 Duración: 03minLots of people have warned about robot invasions, but not like this: tiny bots that don’t want to take over the world, but want to help clear your sinuses of germs. Plus: a group of 15 monkeys living at Kyoto University's primate research institute figure out a way to escape their habitat. Light-powered robot swarms may replace antibiotics for tough sinus infections (Interesting Engineering)Monkeys use trees to catapault themselves out of Japanese laboratory (Daily Telegraph)Let’s all swarm this show’s Patreon page with donations
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How Fireworks Illuminate Independence Day, The Way John Adams Wanted
04/07/2025 Duración: 03minAmerica's second president once said that Independence Day should always feature "illuminations." We'll explain how those pyrotechnics illuminate the sky each July 4. Plus: Seward, Nebraska is a relatively small community, but it goes big every time this holiday rolls around. The chemistry behind fireworks (University of Pennsylvania) Seward Is A Small Town In Nebraska That Offers Plenty Of Peace And Quiet (Only In Your State)Help make our Patreon page blow up (so to speak) with your gift today
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The Original Version Of The Michelin Man Was Kind Of Terrifying
03/07/2025 Duración: 03minFor National Tire Safety Week, the story of a character made of tires, one of the most famous mascots in advertising history… and one who was originally kind of a hot mess. Plus: starting today in Pittsburgh, it’s the World Beard and Moustache Championships. Michelin Man: The Inside Story (CNN)2025 World Beard and Moustache Championships Bounce over to our Patreon page and help support this show
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Graham Island, The Mediterranean’s Disappearing Volcanic Island
02/07/2025 Duración: 03minThis month in 1831, the Mediterranean Sea got a whole new island, one that European powers bickered over for a few months before the debate ended pretty abruptly. Plus: starting Friday in New Hope, Pennsylvania, it’s the Red, White & Blueberries BBQ Bash. The Mediterranean's short-lived 'Atlantis' (BBC)Red, White & Blueberries BBQ Bash Here’s hoping we see a lot of backers rise up on Patreon (and that their support also doesn’t sink back a few months later)
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How Canada’s Flag Ended Up With A Maple Leaf Instead Of Union Jacks, Beavers Or Mounties
01/07/2025 Duración: 03minHappy Canada Day! The flag you’ll see at events across the country today has quite an origin story: one guy, one red pen and a lot of potential roadblocks. Plus: for National Postal Worker Day in the US, the story of how the Postal Service set up an office in Antarctica. A letter, a red pen and a hand-drawn sketch: How George Stanley created Canada's flag (CBC) Little America, Antarctica, Post Office (US Postal Service)Fly the flag for our show as a backer on Patreon
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June Robertson McCarroll, The Doctor Who Painted A Line Down The Middle Of The Road
30/06/2025 Duración: 03minToday in 1867, the birthday of June Robertson McCarroll, a doctor in California who made a big difference for safety by painting a line down the middle of a road. Plus: starting today in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, it’s the American Jump Rope National Championship. Dr. June Robertson McCarroll Was the Valley’s First Woman Doctor—but She’s Best Known for a Transportation Innovation (Coachella Valley Independent) American Jump Rope National Championship Drive over to our Patreon page and back this show
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Fashion Week: The Jumpsuit Century
27/06/2025 Duración: 03minWe’re replaying some of our favorite shows about clothes and the people who wear them. In this episode from May 2019, the fascinating and unlikely history of the garment that got its name because it was the outfit of choice for people jumping out of airplanes. Plus: we know there’s no jumpsuit like an Elvis jumpsuit. Quartz noted that one of the King’s suits, the white peacock-themed one, sold at auction in 2008 for a record $300,000.Jumpsuits (Quartz)Elvis Hoodie (GearHuman)Back Cool Weird Awesome on Patreon for just $1 a month!
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Fashion Week: The Fabric With A Built-In Cooling System
26/06/2025 Duración: 02minWe’re replaying some of our favorite shows about clothes and the people who wear them. In this episode from August 2020, a research team in China invents a fabric that can transfer heat away from us and back into the surrounding air. Plus: for National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day, the story of the biggest chocolate chip cookie of all time. New fabric could help keep you cool in the summer, even without A/C (Science Daily)Largest biscuit / cookie (Guinness World Records)Nobody’s cooler than the Cool Weird Awesome backers on Patreon
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Fashion Week: The Plastic Bags Of Today Could Be The Fashionable Fabric Of Tomorrow
25/06/2025 Duración: 02minWe’re replaying some of our favorite shows about clothes and the people who wear them. In this episode from July 2021, a multi-country research project thinks old plastic bags might be useful to the fashion industry. Plus: Many of us spend a lot of our waking hours typing, but James Cook turns his typing into art. Plastic Bags Could Be Recycled Into Wearable Fabrics, Says New Research (Designboom)This Artist Draws Using Only Letters and Numbers on Old Typewriters (The Sifter)Help make this podcast even more fashionable as a backer on Patreon!
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Fashion Week: Bioprinting Clothes (And More) Out Of Algae
24/06/2025 Duración: 03minWe’re replaying some of our favorite shows about clothes and the people who wear them. In this episode from May 2021, a research team at the University of Rochester and the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands makes some big advancements in bioprinting, which is 3D printing with living materials. Plus: a pro golfer and a race car driver set a world record for longest golf drive into a moving vehicle. Will your future clothes be made of algae? (University of Rochester)Watch a Pro Golfer Land a Golf Ball Into a Moving BMW M8 Convertible From 909 Feet Away (The Drive)The future is here, and it’s all thanks to our backers on Patreon
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Fashion Week: The First Top Hat Got Its Inventor Arrested
23/06/2025 Duración: 03minWe’re replaying some of our favorite shows about clothes and the people who wear them. In this episode from January 2021, the story of the debut of the top hat, and what a debut it was. Plus: the time in 1974 that a team at MIT built a 35 pound yo-yo and dropped it from a 21 story building. History of the Top Hat (International Formalwear Association via Archive.org)James H. Williams, Jr. and the world’s largest yo-yo, 1974 (MIT Black History)Hats or not, we think our Patreon backers are tops
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Monkeys Follow Some Of The Same Economic Principles As Humans Do
20/06/2025 Duración: 03minToday in 2005, the release of a study that found something interesting: monkeys appeared to have some of the same economic ideas that humans have, especially when it comes to something known as loss aversion. Plus: tomorrow in Illinois, it's the Great Galena Balloon Race. Humans Rational and Irrational Buying Behavior Is Mirrored in Monkeys (Yale University)Great Galena Balloon Race (Enjoy Illinois)When you back this show on Patreon, everybody gains and nobody loses
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How The Juneteenth Holiday Spread From Galveston, To Texas, To The Whole United States
19/06/2025 Duración: 03minHolidays don't just show up; people make them happen. Here's the story of how a commemoration of a key moment in ending the institution of slavery eventually became a national holiday across the United States. Former State Rep. Al Edwards, Who Helped Make Juneteenth A State Holiday, Dies At 83 (Houston Public Media)How 97-Year-Old Activist Opal Lee Became the “Grandmother of Juneteenth” (Biography)
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The Vatican Once Sang The Praises Of The Blues Brothers
18/06/2025 Duración: 03minThis week in 2010, a classic movie gets a shout-out from a very unusual place: the Vatican was repping The Blues Brothers. Plus: starting tomorrow in Ingliston, Edinburgh, Scotland, it's the Royal Highland Show. Vatican beatifies Blues Brothers ... well almost (Reuters)World Highland ShowYou on the motorcycle! You two girls! Tell your friends! Back this show on Patreon!
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To Get Kids To Eat Their Veggies, A Company Sold A Line Called “I Hate Peas”
17/06/2025 Duración: 03minFor National Eat Your Vegetables Day, the story of the time a company tried to get kids to eat French fry-shaped versions of dinner table vegetables, but with a name that may not have done them any favors. Plus: this weekend in Washington state, it's Sumner's Rhubarb Days Festival. Funky Fries and other foods that flopped (CNN)Rhubarb Days 2025 If you love this show as much as kids don’t love certain veggies, then back us on Patreon today
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Cracker Jack Originally Came With More Peanuts And No Prizes
16/06/2025 Duración: 03minToday in 1893, the invention of the beloved snack Cracker Jack, though there was a time when its signature sweet blend of peanuts and popcorn was considerably different, and the prizes were nowhere to be found. Plus: today in 2006, the end to a more than a century-long war, one that was only ever on paper. 14 Classic Facts About Cracker Jack (Mental Floss)Montenegro, Japan to declare truce (UPI)Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack, Patreon’s the site where our show you can back
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The Man Versus Horse Marathon Is Pretty Much What The Name Suggests
13/06/2025 Duración: 03minTomorrow in Wales, a race where there are human runners and horses with riders on the same course, trying to get to the finish line ahead of each other. And it all started with an argument in a pub. Plus: starting tomorrow in Brooten, Minnesota, it’s Redhead Creamery Curd Fest. 44th MAN VERSUS HORSE Redhead Creamery Curd Fest Race on over to our Patreon page so you can back this show
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Easy Listening Emerged From When Radio Programmers Tried To Target Women
12/06/2025 Duración: 03minToday in 1971 that the magazine Record World published an article about a new and very chill radio format that was the precursor of Easy Listening. Plus: this Saturday in New York City, it’s Pigeon Fest. Music Only for a Woman: The Birth of Easy Listening (JSTOR)Pigeon Fest Help keep this show chill as a backer on Patreon