
15 Things Every Grocery Store Displayed Near the Checkout in the 1970s
These checkout displays showed how 1970s grocery stores mixed convenience, temptation, household needs, and small pleasures into the final moments of every shopping trip.


These checkout displays showed how 1970s grocery stores mixed convenience, temptation, household needs, and small pleasures into the final moments of every shopping trip.

Some warnings from the 1960s made perfect sense, but others left kids confused and adults unable to fully explain themselves.

The 1950s road trip dad had a specific set of moves that made every long drive feel like an adventure worth remembering.

Arenas are supposed to be buildings. Steel. Glass. Seats. In today’s NBA, they are something else. Assets. Ecosystems. Billion-dollar machines that generate value far beyond basketball. And at the center of each one is a familiar truth. They were built on players. Not just their performances, but their presence. Their ability to transform franchises into something investors can believe in. Something cities can rally around. Something owners can monetize for decades. This is the story of four arenas. And the superstars who made them possible.

Billions have been created. Millions have been paid. And the gap between the two is where the real story lives. When Stephen Curry said NBA players are “grossly underpaid,” he wasn’t talking about salaries. He was pointing to something bigger. Ownership.

The NBA Draft Lottery is supposed to create hope. Balance. A pathway for struggling franchises to rebuild toward relevance. But every once in a while, the ping-pong balls threaten to create something completely different. Chaos. The 2026 lottery carries that kind of danger. A few unlikely outcomes could dramatically reshape the balance of power across the league, accelerate dynasties before they fully peak, or leave entire front offices staring at disaster overnight. And that is why executives around the NBA will be watching Sunday’s draw with absolute paranoia.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. shuts down a fan questioning Carson Hocevar’s Most Popular Driver chances, bluntly reminding critics he won the award 15 times.

Crisis expert Molly McPherson blasts Patriots coach Mike Vrabel for refusing accountability in the Dianna Russini scandal.

Ryan Blaney jokes about needing a dummy radio button to vent without broadcasts, revealing how emotional outbursts help drivers process chaos at 180 mph.
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