On This Day: May 30, 1993 — Fittipaldi Drinks the OJ
On May 30, 1993, Emerson Fittipaldi won the Indy 500 and skipped the milk for orange juice. Fans booed, dairy farmers revolted, and a tradition got more sacred.
On May 30, 1993, Emerson Fittipaldi won the Indy 500 and skipped the milk for orange juice. Fans booed, dairy farmers revolted, and a tradition got more sacred.
The Heysel Stadium disaster happened on May 29, 1985, an hour before the European Cup final between Liverpool and Juventus in Brussels, when a charge by Liverpool fans pushed Italian supporters against a crumbling concrete wall that buckled and collapsed, killing 39 people. Thirty-two of the dead were Italian. The youngest was 11 years old….
At 6:43 p.m. on May 28, 1987, an 18-year-old West German kid named Mathias Rust set the wheels of a rented Cessna 172 down on a bridge fifty feet from St. Basil’s Cathedral. He had just flown 750 miles through the most heavily defended airspace on the planet. Soviet radar had tracked him. A MiG-23…
At 3:01 p.m. on May 27, 1995, Christopher Reeve was thrown from his horse at a low-stakes event in Culpeper, Virginia. What happened next reshaped spinal cord research for a decade.
On the morning of May 26, 1990, radio DJs across America were spinning a chart that had never existed before. Five songs sat at numbers one through five on the Billboard Hot 100. Five songs. All by women. It sounds like a footnote, but in the pop landscape of 1990 — an industry still largely…
On May 25, 1983, Return of the Jedi opened in 1,002 theaters and broke every box-office record on the books. Inside the secret production, the Ewok backlash, and how George Lucas closed the original Star Wars trilogy.
Hudson Hawk hit theaters on May 24, 1991 and became Bruce Willis’s most notorious flop. 7 wild facts about the $65M cult classic that almost broke a career.
On May 23, 1980, Warner Bros. dropped The Shining into U.S. theaters and quietly rewired horror cinema for the next four decades. Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining 1980 release wasn’t an obvious blockbuster on opening weekend — critics shrugged, Stephen King fumed, and the Razzies even nominated it for Worst Director. Forty-five years later, it’s preserved…
The Van Gogh Portrait of Dr. Gachet auction on May 15, 1990 detonated the art market in under three minutes. Christie’s New York chairman Christopher Burge opened the bidding at $20 million and slammed his gavel down at a final hammer price of $75 million — $82.5 million with the buyer’s premium — making it…
The Seinfeld finale aired on May 14, 1998, and roughly 76 million Americans dropped what they were doing to watch four New Yorkers go to jail for being terrible people. Twenty-eight years later, it’s still one of the most-watched television finales in U.S. history, and it remains the most argued-about goodbye in sitcom history. This…
On May 13, 1981, a Turkish gunman shot Pope John Paul II in St. Peter’s Square. The bullet missed his heart by millimeters. Here are 7 shocking facts about that day.
On May 11, 1997, Deep Blue vs Kasparov ended in a way nobody outside IBM thought possible. Garry Kasparov, the most dominant world chess champion of the modern era, resigned a game after only 19 moves against an IBM supercomputer, handing Deep Blue a 3.5–2.5 series victory in the Equitable Center in New York. It…