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May 27, 2026

When Michael Jackson Surprised SMAP on Their Show in Japan, 2006

On May 31, 2006, Michael Jackson made a legendary unannounced appearance on SMAP×SMAP, the massively popular variety show hosted by Japan’s iconic boy band, SMAP. The historic segment, which later aired on June 5, 2006, remains celebrated as one of the most memorable and wholesome celebrity surprises in television history.


Michael was visiting Tokyo to receive the MTV Japan Legend Award. It marked his first major public appearance after his 2005 trial, making his presence in Japan highly anticipated but strictly low-profile.

SMAP, consisting of Masahiro Nakai, Takuya Kimura, Goro Inagaki, Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, and Shingo Katori, were completely unaware of his visit. The show’s production team kept the entire operation highly classified. While the five members were casually practicing choreography and rehearsing a song on stage, Michael secretly watched them from the control room.

As the group stood on stage, the studio doors parted, and the King of Pop stepped directly into the room. SMAP froze in absolute disbelief. The members suffered what fans describe as a complete “brain error.” Some dropped to their knees, some nervously laughed, and others bowed repeatedly while completely unable to process that a global icon was standing feet away from them.

Michael, accompanied by an interpreter, approached the starstruck idols with extreme humility. He praised their rehearsal, stating, “I enjoyed the performance. It was very nice.” He shook hands, offered high-fives, and sweetly explained, “We drove today to see you. To surprise you.”

At the time, SMAP were the absolute kings of Japanese pop culture, yet they were reduced to ultimate superfans in Michael's presence. Michael concluded the brief but impactful meeting by thanking the Japanese public for their loyalty, offering a signature peace sign, and leaving them with his classic farewell: “God bless you. Love and peace.”

1948 MG TC Special Roadster: Pure British Sports Car Elegance

The 1948 MG TC Special Roadster is one of the most charming and iconic British sports cars of the postwar period. Produced between 1945 and 1949, the TC was the first MG exported in significant numbers to the United States, helping to spark the American love affair with British sports cars.

With its low-slung body, sweeping fenders, large 19-inch wire wheels, and signature upright radiator grille, the TC perfectly embodied classic British roadster styling. Powered by a 1.25-liter XPAG inline-four engine producing approximately 54 horsepower, it offered nimble handling and an exhilarating open-air driving experience.

Simple, raw, and immensely fun, the 1948 MG TC Special Roadster remains highly prized by enthusiasts as a pure expression of vintage motoring joy. These beautiful vintage photos showcase the timeless charm, mechanical purity, and sporting spirit of the 1948 MG TC Special Roadster, a true icon that helped ignite the golden age of British sports cars in America.






24 Rare and Adorable Photos of Stevie Nicks as a Child in the 1940s and 1950s

Stevie Nicks is an American singer-songwriter, known for her work with the band Fleetwood Mac and as a solo artist. She had a transient yet deeply musical childhood marked by constant moving across the American Southwest and early artistic shaping by her family.

Born Stephanie Lynn Nicks on May 26, 1948, in Phoenix, Arizona, she was raised in a household where her imagination was highly encouraged. Her early years laid the groundwork for her iconic storytelling, distinct fashion style, and her future legendary rock career.

Her father, Jess Nicks, was a high-level corporate executive who frequently climbed the corporate ladder, eventually becoming a vice president for Greyhound. This required the family to pack up and move every few years. She spent her infancy in Phoenix, moved to Los Angeles, spent two years in Albuquerque, five years in El Paso, and her junior high years in Salt Lake City. Finally settling in California during her teenage years, this nomadic lifestyle created a sense of rootlessness that heavily influenced the nostalgic, wandering themes in her later songwriting.

While her parents were massive music fans, her primary musical mentor was her maternal grandfather, Aaron Jess “A.J.” Nicks Sr.. He was an eccentric, struggling country and western singer who traveled around playing pool and music. By the time Stevie was four years old, her grandfather was already teaching her to sing harmonies. They famously performed country duets together in local saloons. This early training deeply embedded a love for performance in Stevie, who spent her adolescence constantly playing records and living in her “own little musical world.”

Her mother, Barbara Nicks, played a massive role in shaping Stevie’s distinct, ethereal aesthetic. Barbara intensely nurtured Stevie’s love for fairy tales, folklore, and fantasy. This creative breeding directly fostered the vivid imagination, poetic lyrics, and mystical “witchy” persona that defined her adulthood.

For her 16th birthday, her parents gifted her a Goya acoustic guitar. After taking lessons for only about a month, she quickly took off on her own. She immediately used the instrument to write her very first song, titled “I’ve Loved and I’ve Lost, and I’m Sad but Not Blue.”

During her mid-teens, her family relocated to the California suburbs. While attending Arcadia High School in Southern California, she joined a folk-rock group called The Changing Times, which focused on vocal harmonies.

Her family moved again to Palo Alto before her senior year. While attending Menlo-Atherton High School, she attended a Wednesday night church youth social. There, she saw a boy named Lindsey Buckingham playing “California Dreamin’” on his guitar. She walked right up to him and boldly joined in on harmony, sparking a legendary musical and romantic partnership that would eventually alter the course of rock history.






May 26, 2026

Photos of Pam Grier on the Set of “Coffy” (1973)

Coffy is a 1973 American blaxploitation action film written and directed by Jack Hill. The story is about a black female vigilante played by Pam Grier who seeks violent revenge against a heroin dealer responsible for her sister's addiction. Produced and distributed by American International Pictures (AIP), Coffy was the third Jack Hill film to star Grier, after The Big Doll House (1971) and The Big Bird Cage (1972). Grier would go on to boost her career as the leading “femme fatale” of blaxploitation for the rest of the 1970s.

AIP gave Hill a razor-thin budget of roughly $500,000 and an incredibly compressed 18-day shooting schedule in Los Angeles. Because time was currency, Grier spent most of the shoot moving rapidly from setup to setup with virtually no time for retakes. The cast and crew routinely worked 15- to 18-hour days to get the coverage they needed.

Grier performed the vast majority of her own stunts in the film, a choice born out of both necessity and personal drive. In the infamous, chaotic catfight scene at a party, Grier was thrown into a glass coffee table. The crew used “sugar glass,” which is designed to shatter safely, but the sheer physical force required left her with real cuts and bruises.

The iconic sawed-off shotgun Coffy carries was a real, heavy weapon. Grier had to learn to handle it naturally while running in high-heeled platform shoes and 1970s wardrobe, frequently bruising her shoulder from the recoil during blank-firing takes.

One of the film’s most famous character traits, Coffy hiding razor blades in her afro to defend herself during hair-pulling fights, was a practical concept that required careful handling on set. Grier worked closely with the hair stylists to ensure the prop blades could be pulled out quickly and safely on camera without cutting her fingers or her scalp during fast-paced action sequences.

Because the wardrobe budget was minimal, Grier brought many of her own clothes to the set to flesh out Coffy’s civilian look. She worked closely with Jack Hill to ensure that even when the character was dressed provocatively for her undercover operations, she retained an aura of absolute command and physical capability rather than passive exploitation.

Grier and director Jack Hill already had a strong working shorthand from their previous collaborations on women-in-prison films. On set, Hill treated Grier as a true creative partner. He frequently adjusted dialogue on the fly based on her feedback to ensure Coffy sounded like a fierce, fiercely intelligent woman driven by a personal vendetta against the drug trade, rather than a male caricature of an action hero.

The gamble paid off. Grier’s commanding presence on that frantic 18-day shoot turned Coffy into a massive box office hit, pulling in over $4 million and solidifying her status as the first undisputed female action star in American cinema.






Jeanne Klein: Elegant Muse of Mid-Century Fashion

Jeanne Klein was a French-American fashion model active in the 1950s, best known for her elegant beauty and long collaboration with her husband, renowned photographer William Klein.

With her refined features, graceful presence, and sophisticated style, Jeanne became a favorite muse for leading fashion photographers of the era. She appeared in numerous high-profile editorials for Vogue and other prestigious magazines, often modeling couture from top designers such as Balenciaga and Christian Dior.

Beyond modeling, Jeanne played an important role in her husband’s artistic journey, frequently appearing in his groundbreaking fashion and street photography. Her timeless, understated elegance made her one of the memorable faces of mid-century high fashion. These beautiful vintage photos capture the poise, timeless elegance, and quiet confidence of Jeanne Klein, one of the most graceful and enduring muses of mid-century fashion photography.

Evening dress of gray velvet and taffeta worn by Jeanne Klein at the home of Balenciaga, photo by Clifford Coffin, Vogue, November 1, 1948

Jeanne Klein in almond green and white dotted silk surah dress by Jean Patou, photo by Philippe Pottier, 1948

Jeanne Klein in dress and coat by Jeanne Lafaurie, photo by Philippe Pottier, 1948

Jeanne Klein in hazel and black plaid taffeta dress, the skirt is very wide and the neckline is veiled in beige chiffon by Grès, photo by Philippe Pottier, 1948

Jeanne Klein wearing an otter fur coat and hat with two pom-poms by Christian Dior, photo by Arik Nepo, Vogue, Paris, September 1948

The First American Woman in Space: 34 Amazing Photos of a Young Sally Ride From Between the Late 1970s and 1980s

Dr. Sally Ride (May 26, 1951 – July 23, 2012) was an American physicist, trailblazing astronaut, and educator who made history on June 18, 1983, as the first American woman to fly in space. At 32 years old, she was also the youngest American astronaut to travel to space at that time. While she was the first American woman to break this barrier, she was preceded globally by Soviet cosmonauts Valentina Tereshkova (1963) and Svetlana Savitskaya (1982).

Born in Los Angeles, Ride was an exceptionally gifted athlete and a nationally ranked junior tennis player. She briefly considered a professional tennis career but ultimately chose to pursue her passion for science. She attended Stanford University, where she earned a unique double bachelor's degree in physics and English literature, followed by a master's degree and a Ph.D. in astrophysics (1978), specializing in laser physics and how X-rays interact with interstellar mediums.

In 1977, Ride saw an ad in the Stanford student newspaper announcing that NASA was recruiting scientists and “mission specialists” for its new Space Shuttle program, and for the first time, opening the doors to women. She beat out more than 8,000 applicants to become one of six women selected for NASA’s historic Class of '78.

On June 18, 1983, she launched aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger. As a mission specialist and flight engineer, she helped deploy communications satellites and became the first person to use the shuttle’s robotic arm to retrieve a satellite in orbit. She returned to space in 1984, again aboard Challenger, logging a career total of more than 343 hours in space.

Ride earned immense respect for her analytical mind. She holds the unique distinction of being the only person appointed to serve on both presidential investigation boards for NASA’s space shuttle disasters: the Challenger explosion in 1986 and the Columbia crash in 2003.

Ride retired from NASA in 1987 and returned to academia, becoming a professor of physics at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and director of the California Space Science Institute.

Driven by a passion to narrow the gender gap in science, she co-founded Sally Ride Science in 2001, an organization dedicated to creating narrow-interest STEM programs, books, and materials for elementary and middle school students, specifically focusing on keeping young girls engaged in math and science.

Following her death from pancreatic cancer in 2012 at age 61, her obituary revealed she had been in a loving 27-year relationship with her partner, Tam O’Shaughnessy. This posthumously made Ride the first known LGBTQ+ astronaut in history.

In 2013, President Barack Obama posthumously awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.






The Siberian “Mad Monk”: Portraits of Grigori Rasputin From the 1900s and 1910s

Grigori Rasputin (full name Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin, born January 21, 1869 – December 30, 1916) was a Russian mystic, faith healer, and controversial advisor to the imperial family of Tsar Nicholas II. Often called the “Mad Monk” or “Holy Devil,” he rose from Siberian peasant roots to exert significant influence over the Russian court in the final years of the Romanov dynasty.

Rasputin was born into a peasant family in the remote Siberian village of Pokrovskoye (near Tyumen). His family was poor and largely illiterate; he himself received little formal education and remained functionally illiterate for much of his life.

As a young man, he gained a reputation for wild behavior: drinking, womanizing, and petty crime, which earned him the surname “Rasputin,” roughly meaning “debauched one” or “licentious.” Around age 18, he experienced a religious conversion. He visited the Verkhoturye Monastery, where he encountered the Khlysty (Flagellants) sect. He never became a monk but adopted a wandering lifestyle as a starets (self-proclaimed holy man), traveling to places like Mount Athos in Greece and Jerusalem.

He married Praskovya (Proskovya) Dubrovina around 1887 at age 19; they had several children (three or four surviving into adulthood, including daughter Maria). Marriage didn’t tame him; he continued wandering and living off donations while building a reputation for healing and prophecy.

In 1903–1905, Rasputin arrived in St. Petersburg. The city’s elite circles were fascinated by mysticism and the occult, and his unkempt appearance, piercing eyes, and claims of spiritual powers made him a novelty. High-ranking clergy like Bishop Hermogen and Inspector Theophan initially supported him.

He was introduced to Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra in 1905. His pivotal moment came around 1908 when he was called to help their young son, Tsarevich Alexei, who suffered from hemophilia (a hereditary bleeding disorder). Rasputin appeared to ease the boy’s suffering, likely through hypnosis, calm reassurance, or placebo effect, during bleeding episodes. This won the desperate parents’ trust. He famously told them that the fate of their child and the dynasty were linked to him.

Rasputin’s influence grew dramatically, peaking after 1915 when Nicholas took personal command of the Russian army during World War I and left Alexandra in charge of domestic affairs. Rasputin became her close advisor, helping appoint ministers and church officials (often favoring those loyal to him). His interventions sometimes harmed the war effort and government stability.

He was deeply controversial: accused of sexual debauchery, drunkenness, and exploiting his position with women; seen by many as a symbol of royal corruption and incompetence; hated by nobles, the church, and parts of society for his peasant manners in the imperial court and his political meddling. His supporters viewed him as a genuine holy man and healer; critics saw him as a manipulative charlatan.

By late 1916, a group of nobles, including Prince Felix Yusupov, Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich, and right-wing politician Vladimir Purishkevich, decided to eliminate him to “save” Russia. The most famous account (from Yusupov’s memoirs) claims they lured Rasputin to the Yusupov Palace on the night of December 29–30, 1916. They allegedly poisoned him with cyanide-laced cakes and wine (which had no effect), shot him in the chest, beat him, and finally drowned him in the Neva River after he supposedly kept reviving.

Forensic evidence and modern analysis suggest a simpler story: He was shot multiple times at close range (including a fatal contact wound to the forehead), likely in the basement. There is no strong evidence of poisoning or drowning in the autopsy. Yusupov’s dramatic tale was probably embellished for dramatic effect and to portray the killers as heroic.

Rasputin’s body was dumped in the river and later recovered. His death did little to stabilize Russia; the February Revolution of 1917 overthrew the monarchy the following year, and the Bolsheviks executed the royal family in 1918.

Rasputin remains a legendary figure––part mystic, part villain––in popular culture, inspiring books, films, and songs (like Boney M.’s “Rasputin”). He symbolizes the decay of imperial Russia and the dangers of unchecked influence. While his exact powers and intentions are debated, his role in the Romanovs’ downfall is undeniable due to the scandals and resentment he fueled. His daughter Maria later wrote books defending him and lived an adventurous life as a circus performer in exile.









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