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Denver International Airport: The Wildest Facts About America's Most Mysterious Airport

Denver International Airport: The Wildest Facts About America's Most Mysterious Airport

Denver International Airport opened in 1995, ran 16 months behind schedule, cost $4.8 billion (more than double the original estimate), and immediately began generating conspiracy theories that have never quite stopped. Here's what's actually true — ...

3 Fascinating Transportation Facts About Indonesia

3 Fascinating Transportation Facts About Indonesia

Indonesia is the world's largest archipelago nation — 17,508 islands, 270 million people, and a geography that makes getting from one place to another a fundamentally different logistical challenge than in any continental country. What has emerged fr...

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Bihar, India: The Birthplace of Buddhism and One of the Most Overlooked States in Asia

Most people could not find Bihar on a map. This is a significant oversight in world cultural geography, because Bihar is where some of the most important events in Asian and world history took place — and where the physical traces of those events can...

Canada Travel Guide 2026: The World's Second Largest Country and What Most People Get Completely Wrong About It

Canada Travel Guide 2026: The World's Second Largest Country and What Most People Get Completely Wrong About It

Canada is the second largest country in the world by area — 9.98 million km², slightly larger than the entire continent of Europe — and has a population of approximately 40 million people. That ratio of land to people produces a country where 90% of ...

Is Iran Dangerous for Americans? An Honest Risk Assessment That Separates Facts from Fear

Is Iran Dangerous for Americans? An Honest Risk Assessment That Separates Facts from Fear

We're not going to sugarcoat this. The US State Department rates Iran as Level 4: Do Not Travel — its highest warning level, the same as active war zones like Syria, Somalia, and Yemen. That sounds terrifying. But the reasons for Iran's Level 4 ratin...

What Does 'Poor' Mean in Luxembourg? Wealth, Inequality, and the Reality of Europe's Richest Country

What Does 'Poor' Mean in Luxembourg? Wealth, Inequality, and the Reality of Europe's Richest Country

Luxembourg has the highest GDP per capita of any European Union member state — approximately €125,000–140,000 per capita, roughly four times the EU average and about twice Germany or France. It is a country of 680,000 people on 2,586 km² (slightly ...

Can You Actually Rent a Place in Vatican City? The Truth About Living There

Can You Actually Rent a Place in Vatican City? The Truth About Living There

Vatican City is the world's smallest internationally recognised state — 44 hectares, 800 permanent residents, and no airport, no railway station open to the public, and no conventional accommodation sector. There are no hotels within the Vatican's wa...

Canada is Not What You Think: 10 Things That Genuinely Surprise Visitors

Canada is Not What You Think: 10 Things That Genuinely Surprise Visitors

Canada has a branding problem. Not a bad one — "nice, clean, polite, cold, hockey" is perfectly respectable — but it understates the country dramatically. Canada is enormous, geologically weird, historically complex, and home to some of the world's m...

Wyoming: 10 Things Most Americans Don't Know About the Cowboy State

Wyoming: 10 Things Most Americans Don't Know About the Cowboy State

Wyoming is the 10th largest state in the US by area and the smallest by population with a population of just 580,000, that's fewer people than the city of Memphis, Tennessee. Most Americans know it as the home of Yellowstone and maybe a cowboy hat or...

The Buckhorn Exchange: Denver's Oldest Restaurant and Its Wild History

The Buckhorn Exchange: Denver's Oldest Restaurant and Its Wild History

Denver has no shortage of great restaurants, but none of them come close to matching the history of the Buckhorn Exchange. Open since 1893, it's the oldest restaurant in Denver, Colorado, and one of the most unusual dining experiences.

Is Lebanon Safe to Travel in 2026?

Is Lebanon Safe to Travel in 2026?

***The advice of the UK FCDO, US State Department, and most European foreign ministries as of May 2026 is Level 4 "Do Not Travel" for Lebanon.*** Lebanon entered 2026 in a way that its residents describe as "the new normal" which is to say, be...

Kuwait Travel Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Visit

Kuwait Travel Guide 2026: Everything You Need to Know Before You Visit

Kuwait is a small, oil-rich emirate at the northwestern tip of the Persian Gulf — bordered by Iraq to the north and Saudi Arabia to the south. With a population of around 4.8 million (of whom roughly 70% are expatriates), Kuwait is one of the world's...

Suva: Fiji's Capital City and the Pacific's Hidden Urban Gem

Suva: Fiji's Capital City and the Pacific's Hidden Urban Gem

When most people picture Fiji, they picture white sand, turquoise water, and overwater bungalows. Suva, the capital, gives you something completely different — and arguably more interesting. It is a real working city with a market, a museum, a vibran...

Denver's 16th Street Mall: The History Behind Colorado's Most Famous Boulevard

Denver's 16th Street Mall: The History Behind Colorado's Most Famous Boulevard

Walk the length of Denver's 16th Street Mall today and you'll pass chain restaurants, hotel lobbies, coffee shops, street performers, and the constant swoosh of free mall ride buses. It's pleasant and busy — Denver's version of a downtown promenade. ...

Littleton, Colorado: The Underrated Denver Suburb That Deserves a Closer Look

Littleton, Colorado: The Underrated Denver Suburb That Deserves a Closer Look

When people think of Colorado, they think of Denver's craft beer scene, Aspen's ski slopes, and Boulder's crunchy-tech energy. Few think of Littleton — and that's exactly what makes this city of 47,000 people just 10 miles south of Denver's downtown ...

The Marshall Islands: Nuclear History, Ocean Culture, and a Nation Between Tides

The Marshall Islands: Nuclear History, Ocean Culture, and a Nation Between Tides

The Marshall Islands occupy 1,225 islands and islets forming 29 coral atolls in the central Pacific — a nation that has endured one of the most devastating legacies of the 20th century and continues to face existential challenges from rising seas. Un...