Luc Haasbroek is a writer and videographer from Durban, South Africa. He has been writing professionally about pop culture for eight years. Luc's areas of interest are broad: he's just as passionate ...
This incredible garage find was uncovered by San Antonio’s Gordon Chisenhall, who seems to have a penchant for unearthing relics from hot rodding’s bygone days. The ’61 Chevrolet Impala SS 409 used to ...
OK Computer was very much a product of its time. The late 1990s was an era of immense growth, especially in terms of technology and digital landscapes. Where one might find a positive in that change, ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) - Figure skaters from Northeast Ohio and beyond are grieving Thursday after an American Airlines flight collided with an Army helicopter, killing all 67 people aboard. Fourteen ...
Bob Dylan’s entry into the ’60s New York Greenwich Village folk scene was cataclysmically groundbreaking. At the ripe age of 20-years-old, Dylan, the ambitious hustler, was not only able to get a ...
Former Uproxx cover star Tate McRae is back with a new single and video, “It’s OK I’m OK,” which she dropped today after completing the US leg of her most recent tour and spending the past week ...
Back in Korea, Chang-ho Shin, chef and owner of Joo Ok, was flying high, racking up awards from Michelin to Asia’s 50 Best since opening his restaurant in 2016, but he got to a point where “I needed ...
1961 was a transitional year for Chevrolet, with the introduction of the new 409 cubic-inch big-block V8 (a five-year performance staple for the Bowtie that was retired in 1965) and the ...
Algerian demonstrators arrested in Puteaux, west of Paris, during the peaceful demonstration on October 17, 1961, wait with their hands above their heads to be questioned under police surveillance, ...
Play the song “Ancora, Ancora, Ancora,” by the great Italian diva Mina, at any club in Milan, and the ragazzi will still, nearly 50 years after its release, breathlessly sing along. “Farmi morire ...
“This stuff tastes like crap,” the caller said. In 1994, Coca-Cola invited consumers to phone an 800 number to leave their candid comments about OK Soda, a new product the beverage giant was ...