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  <title>Backstory USA</title>
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  <description>The surprising origins of everyday things</description>
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    <title>The Jewish Organizer and Henry Ford&#039;s Unlikely Alliance That Gave America Its Weekends</title>
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    <description>Before 1926, most Americans worked six days a week without question. Then an unexpected partnership between a labor activist and the world&#039;s most famous industrialist changed how an entire nation thinks about work and leisure.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 08:08:08 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Cincinnati Dentist&#039;s Kitchen Accident That Created America&#039;s Movie Theater Empire</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/cincinnati-dentist-kitchen-accident-movie-theater-empire/</link>
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    <description>Popcorn existed for thousands of years, but it took a dentist trying to solve his patients&#039; tooth problems and a World&#039;s Fair mishap to turn it into the snack that would define American entertainment.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 08:08:08 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Wallpaper Disaster That Accidentally Conquered Every American Closet</title>
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    <description>A 1950s chemist kept creating the world&#039;s worst wallpaper adhesive—weak, sticky, and covered in lint. His company was ready to trash the formula until someone noticed what it was actually good at.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 08:08:08 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>When Publishers Called Paperbacks &#039;Trash,&#039; One Desperate Company Changed How America Reads</title>
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    <description>In 1939, while established publishers dismissed cheap paperback books as literary garbage, a failing company took a massive gamble on 25-cent pocket books. That risky bet didn&#039;t just save the business — it accidentally democratized reading for millions of Americans who had never owned a book before.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:44:44 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Before It Was America&#039;s Favorite Condiment, Ketchup Was Sold as Medicine</title>
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    <description>The red sauce sitting in 97% of American refrigerators started as a fermented fish paste in ancient Asia, became a patent medicine promising to cure everything from indigestion to liver disease, and only accidentally became the burger&#039;s best friend after one obsessive manufacturer&#039;s quest for the perfect recipe.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:44:44 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>America&#039;s Front Porch Was Born From Fear, Not Friendliness</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/americas-front-porch-was-born-from-fear-not-friendliness/</link>
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    <description>The quintessential American front porch — where neighbors chat and children play — wasn&#039;t designed for community building. It emerged from 19th-century terror of deadly diseases that Americans believed traveled through indoor air, forcing families to seek refuge outside their own homes.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:44:44 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>From Hospital Basement to Suburban Gold Rush: How One Newspaper Story Launched America&#039;s Weekend Treasure Hunt</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/garage-sale-origins-american-suburban-tradition/</link>
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    <description>Garage sales feel like they&#039;ve existed forever, but this quintessentially American tradition only exploded nationwide in the 1970s. The story behind their sudden popularity reveals how economic anxiety and suburban sprawl accidentally created a multi-billion-dollar weekend economy.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 20:05:34 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>How a Corporate Phone Fight Between Two Inventors Rewired America&#039;s Daily Greeting</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/hello-telephone-edison-bell-greeting-history/</link>
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    <description>Before Alexander Graham Bell&#039;s telephone, Americans barely used the word &#039;hello.&#039; A heated disagreement between Bell and Thomas Edison over proper phone etiquette accidentally created the greeting that now dominates human conversation worldwide.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 20:05:34 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Missing Tool That Left Americans Hammering Cans for Half a Century</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/missing-can-opener-invention-history/</link>
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    <description>For 48 years, Americans had tin cans but no practical way to open them. The bizarre gap between container and key reveals how inventors sometimes miss the most obvious solutions hiding in plain sight.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 20:05:34 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Contraption Nobody Wanted That Now Runs Every Summer in America</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/electric-fan-rejected-invention-american-summer/</link>
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    <description>In 1882, Schuyler Wheeler&#039;s electric fan was laughed out of boardrooms as an expensive toy for the wealthy. Today, his basic two-blade design moves air in nearly every American home — and nobody&#039;s figured out how to improve it.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 16:05:11 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>How a Textile Factory Mistake Created America&#039;s 40-Million-Acre Weekend Obsession</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/textile-factory-mistake-created-americas-lawn-obsession/</link>
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    <description>A mechanical engineer&#039;s failed carpet-cutting machine accidentally launched the suburban lawn revolution. Today, Americans spend more time mowing grass than the entire population of Vermont spends at work.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 12:11:31 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>When Swampland Became the American Dream: The Accidental Birth of Suburbia</title>
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    <description>A desperate land developer&#039;s scheme to offload worthless marshland outside Chicago in the 1880s accidentally created the blueprint for suburban America. His failed investment became the template that would reshape how 200 million Americans live today.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 08:08:33 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Traveling Salesman Who Spent 16 Years Being Laughed Out of Bakeries — Until He Changed America Forever</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/otto-rohwedder-sliced-bread-invention-story/</link>
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    <description>Otto Rohwedder&#039;s bread-slicing machine was rejected by nearly every bakery in America for over a decade. Then one small Missouri town took a chance on him, and the rest is delicious history.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2026 00:08:30 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Cardboard Box Was Considered Worthless Trash — Until One Cereal Company Changed Everything</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/cardboard-box-cereal-company-changed-everything/</link>
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    <description>Before the 1890s, cardboard boxes were dismissed as flimsy packaging fit only for lightweight items. Then the Kellogg brothers needed a way to keep their breakfast cereals fresh, and accidentally launched the container that would revolutionize American commerce.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 16:05:28 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>When Napoleon&#039;s Army Needed Cheap Butter, One Chemist&#039;s Answer Sparked America&#039;s Strangest Food War</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/napoleons-army-butter-substitute-margarine-food-war/</link>
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    <description>A French emperor&#039;s military problem led to the invention of margarine in 1869, but what followed was decades of bizarre laws, pink dye requirements, and dairy industry warfare that turned a simple spread into America&#039;s most controversial condiment.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 12:06:16 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Melted Candy Bar That Put a Kitchen Revolution in Every American Home</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/melted-candy-bar-microwave-kitchen-revolution/</link>
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    <description>A Raytheon engineer&#039;s ruined chocolate snack in 1945 accidentally launched the appliance that would transform American cooking forever. What started as wartime radar technology became the countertop machine that changed how millions of families eat dinner.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 08:05:21 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Sleepless Goats That Launched America&#039;s $100 Billion Morning Obsession</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/sleepless-goats-launched-americas-coffee-obsession/</link>
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    <description>A curious goat herder in ancient Ethiopia noticed his animals dancing all night after eating mysterious berries. That observation would eventually fuel the American Revolution and create the ritual that now powers 400 million cups consumed daily across the United States.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 04:06:15 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>When War Made America&#039;s Washing Machines Disappear, Communities Found a Way to Keep Clean</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/when-war-made-americas-washing-machines-disappear-communities-found-way-keep-clean/</link>
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    <description>World War II rationing didn&#039;t just change what Americans ate—it revolutionized how they did laundry. When metal shortages made home washing machines nearly extinct, a new kind of business was born that would quietly reshape neighborhoods across the country.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 20:05:16 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>From Five Failures to Retail Revolution: The Whaler Who Accidentally Created the American Shopping Experience</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/from-five-failures-to-retail-revolution-whaler-who-created-american-shopping/</link>
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    <description>Before one desperate entrepreneur changed everything, Americans had to visit a dozen different shops just to outfit their homes. The story of how a tattooed ex-whaler with a string of bankruptcies behind him accidentally invented the department store—and transformed shopping from a chore into an experience.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 12:05:40 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>The Office Supply That Became a Secret Code for Fighting Nazis</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/paper-clip-nazi-resistance-symbol-norway/</link>
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    <description>You probably have dozens scattered across your desk right now, but during World War II, wearing a paper clip could get you arrested. The simple wire loop became an unlikely symbol of defiance that helped unite a nation against occupation.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 00:06:21 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>A Poet&#039;s Wild Idea Gave America the Mailbox — But Not Before Parisians Nearly Killed It</title>
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    <description>Long before your mailman became a daily fixture, a French poet pitched the radical idea of postal boxes to skeptical Parisians in 1653. They hated it so much they sabotaged the entire system — but the concept survived to transform American neighborhoods forever.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 16:09:12 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Before the Gas Station, There Was No American Road Trip — Just Broken-Down Cars and Uncertain Futures</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/gas-station-invention-american-road-trip-culture/</link>
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    <description>The American road trip feels like a birthright — wind in the window, open highway, nowhere to be. But for the first decade of the automobile age, driving any real distance was a genuine act of faith, and most Americans simply didn&#039;t try it. The humble roadside gas station didn&#039;t just solve a fuel problem. It quietly built the infrastructure for an entire national identity.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 12:57:49 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Two Letters That Conquered Language Started as a Newspaper Joke Nobody Remembers</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/ok-word-origin-boston-newspaper-political-history/</link>
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    <description>&quot;OK&quot; is almost certainly the most spoken and written expression on the planet — used across languages, cultures, and centuries without anyone stopping to wonder where it came from. The answer involves a short-lived Boston comedy trend, a presidential nickname, and one of the stranger accidents in the history of the English language. It&#039;s a very American story, and it&#039;s weirder than you&#039;d expect.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 12:57:49 GMT</pubDate>
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  <item>
    <title>Nobody Wanted Spencer Silver&#039;s Useless Glue — Until It Changed Every Office in America</title>
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    <description>In 1968, a 3M chemist accidentally invented an adhesive that was too weak to be useful — and spent years being politely ignored by his own company. It took a frustrated hymn-book reader losing his bookmark one too many times to finally crack the idea open. The Post-it Note wasn&#039;t born from genius. It was born from stubbornness.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 12:57:49 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>They Were Trying to Make Fancy Wallpaper. They Made Bubble Wrap Instead.</title>
    <link>https://backstoryusa.com/accidental-invention-bubble-wrap-history/</link>
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    <description>In 1957, two engineers sealed two shower curtains together and expected to revolutionize interior design. What they got instead was something far more useful — and far more satisfying to pop. The story of how Bubble Wrap went from a decorating flop to a packaging legend is one of the great accidental wins in American invention history.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 10:47:36 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>A Wounded Veteran, a Backyard Kettle, and the Drink That Became America</title>
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    <description>Before Coca-Cola was a global icon, it was a pharmacist&#039;s homemade remedy cooked up in an Atlanta backyard by a man desperate to cure his own addiction. The improbable journey from that cast-iron pot to the most recognized product on the planet involves accidental chemistry, audacious health claims, and one very savvy businessman who saw something everyone else had missed.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 10:47:36 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Uncomfortable Truth About Why Americans Tip — And Why the Habit Refuses to Die</title>
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    <description>Most Americans tip without thinking twice about it. But the custom has a darker and more complicated origin than a simple thank-you for good service. From post-Civil War labor exploitation to today&#039;s awkward tip screen moments, the history of tipping in the US is a story about power, race, and a habit that took on a life of its own.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 10:47:36 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Clink, Drink, Repeat: The Weird Ancient History Behind the Wedding Toast</title>
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    <description>You&#039;ve done it at every wedding, holiday dinner, and New Year&#039;s Eve you can remember — raised your glass, clinked it against someone else&#039;s, and taken a sip without ever really asking why. The backstory behind that simple gesture runs through ancient Greece, medieval poison plots, and a city in England that lent the whole custom its name.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 06:38:03 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Revenge on a Plate: How One Chef&#039;s Spite Invented America&#039;s Favorite Snack</title>
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    <description>In the summer of 1853, a cranky customer and an even crankier chef had a disagreement in a Saratoga Springs kitchen — and somehow, that petty standoff gave America the potato chip. It&#039;s one of the most deliciously accidental origin stories in food history, and it explains why you can&#039;t stop at just one.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 06:38:03 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Stuck at 35 MPH: How World War II&#039;s Rubber Crisis Accidentally Built American Road Trip Culture</title>
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    <description>America&#039;s obsession with the open road didn&#039;t start with Jack Kerouac or the interstate highway system — it started with a wartime rubber shortage that grounded the entire country at 35 miles per hour. The enforced stillness of the early 1940s created a pressure that, once released, reshaped how Americans moved, vacationed, and thought about freedom itself.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 06:38:03 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Two-Letter Word That Runs the World Has a Weirder Origin Than You Think</title>
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    <description>You&#039;ve said it a thousand times today without thinking about it. &#039;OK&#039; is arguably the most recognized word on the planet — spoken across every language, printed on screens, tapped into text messages billions of times a day. But its origin is one of the strangest linguistic accidents in American history, born from a Boston newspaper joke and a presidential campaign that most people have completely forgotten.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 02:25:27 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>She Grabbed a Piece of Notebook Paper and Changed the Way the World Drinks Coffee</title>
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    <description>In 1908, a Dresden housewife named Melitta Bentz was so fed up with bitter, gritty coffee that she punched holes in a brass pot and lined it with a page torn from her son&#039;s school notebook. That small act of kitchen frustration quietly became one of the most influential accidental inventions in modern history — and it&#039;s why your morning cup tastes the way it does.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 02:25:27 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Blue Jeans Were Never Supposed to Be Cool — Here&#039;s How They Took Over America Anyway</title>
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    <description>Levi Strauss designed his canvas pants for Gold Rush miners who needed something that wouldn&#039;t fall apart. He never imagined they&#039;d end up on the legs of teenagers, movie stars, and eventually every office worker in America come Friday afternoon. The story of how denim went from workwear to cultural cornerstone is a long, strange trip through Hollywood, post-war rebellion, and a surprisingly effective Hawaiian shirt campaign.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 02:25:27 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of Digg: The Website That Almost Broke the Internet</title>
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    <description>Before Reddit became the front page of the internet, there was Digg — a scrappy, user-powered news aggregator that dominated the mid-2000s web. This is the story of how it rose to glory, crashed spectacularly, and kept trying to come back.</description>
    <author>Backstory USA</author>
    <category>Tech &amp; Culture</category>
    <pubDate>Thu, 12 Mar 2026 19:20:21 GMT</pubDate>
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