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February 28: A Church Founded, A Show Ends, A Helix Revealed

Today, February 28th

February 28: A Church Founded, A Show Ends, A Helix Revealed

February 28 marks a day when communities gathered—around shared belief, around a television screen, and around a scientific revelation that would redefine humanity's understanding of itself. Whether seeking spiritual connection, collective catharsis, or the molecular blueprint of existence, these three moments remind us that humans are driven by a fundamental need to discover what binds us together, whether that binding force is faith, culture, or the twisted ladder of DNA itself.
February 28: A Church Founded, A Show Ends, A Helix Revealed
February 28: Six Worlds in a Single Sky

Today, February 28th

February 28: Six Worlds in a Single Sky

Step outside tonight about thirty minutes after sunset, face west, and look up. Stretching in a gentle arc from the horizon to the southern sky, six of the eight planets of our solar system will be visible at once — Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus, and Jupiter arrayed along the ecliptic like lanterns hung on an invisible wire. It is one of the most accessible and visually stunning astronomical events of the decade, highlighted by NASA as a marquee skywatching moment of 2026, and it is happening tonight.
February 28: Six Worlds in a Single Sky

27 February

February 27: A Parade Begins, A Tower Tilts, A Stand Begins

February 27: A Parade Begins, A Tower Tilts, A Stand Begins Celebration, preservation, and resistance—three moments when communities demanded to be seen and heard February 27 has witnessed moments when people refused to let their stories fade—whether through jubilant celebration, desperate preservation, or defiant occupation. From a parade that would define a city's soul, to engineers racing to save an architectural wonder, to activists reclaiming sacred ground in the name of justice, these events remind us that culture, heritage, and dignity are worth fighting for in whatever form that fight must take. Let the Good Times Roll On February 27, 1827, New Orleans witnessed its first recorded Mardi Gras parade as costumed revelers marched through the streets in a celebration that would become synonymous with the city itself. The tradition had roots in medieval Europe, brought to Louisiana by French Catholic settlers who marked the day before Lent—"Fat Tuesday"—with feasting and merrymaking before the austere weeks ahead. What began as spontaneous street celebrations evolved into organized parades complete with elaborate floats, masked balls, and the throwing of trinkets that would become a Mardi Gras signature. Over nearly two centuries, Mardi Gras has grown into something far larger than a religious observance. It became New Orleans' cultural heartbeat—a celebration where European, African, Caribbean, and American influences blend into something uniquely Louisianan. The krewes that organize parades range from elite social clubs to neighborhood organizations, each with their own traditions and identities. The festival survived Civil War, yellow fever epidemics, economic collapse, and Hurricane Katrina, adapting but never disappearing. Today it attracts over a million visitors annually and generates hundreds of millions in economic impact. Yet for New Orleanians, Mardi Gras remains something more than tourism—it's an assertion of identity, a defiant celebration of joy and resilience in a city that has weathered more than its share of tragedy.   In the streets of New Orleans, a tradition was born that would define a city's spirit The Tilt That Won't Quit One hundred thirty-seven years later, on February 27, 1964, the Italian government issued an international appeal for help saving one of the world's most famous architectural accidents. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, which had been tilting since construction began in 1173, was leaning more dramatically with each passing year. By 1964, the 186-foot bell tower was 5.5 degrees off vertical and moving about one millimeter annually—seemingly inexorably toward collapse. Engineers calculated that without intervention, the tower would eventually topple under its own weight, destroying an 800-year-old masterpiece and likely killing anyone unfortunate enough to be nearby. The problem was deceptively simple: soft soil on one side couldn't support the tower's weight, causing it to sink and tilt. The solution proved maddeningly complex. Over decades, engineers proposed and tested various interventions—counterweights, foundation strengthening, even freezing the ground. Some attempts made the tilting worse. Finally, in the 1990s, a combination of careful soil extraction from beneath the higher side and temporary counterweights gradually reduced the lean by about half a degree, buying centuries of additional stability. The tower reopened to visitors in 2001, still leaning but no longer in danger of imminent collapse. The irony wasn't lost on anyone: Pisa's defining landmark became famous precisely because of a construction flaw, and preserving it meant ensuring it remained flawed—just not fatally so. Engineers raced to save a tower made famous by the very flaw threatening to destroy it ❦ Reclaiming Sacred Ground On February 27, 1973, approximately 200 members of the American Indian Movement and local Oglala Lakota activists occupied the village of Wounded Knee on South Dakota's Pine Ridge Reservation. They chose this site deliberately—it was where U.S. troops had massacred between 250 and 300 Lakota men, women, and children in 1890, marking the final spasm of the Indian Wars. The activists' grievances were both specific and sweeping: corrupt tribal leadership they believed was imposed by the federal government, broken treaties dating back over a century, and broader patterns of discrimination and poverty afflicting Native communities across America. What followed was a 71-day standoff with federal authorities that transfixed the nation. FBI agents, U.S. Marshals, and National Guard troops surrounded the village, while activists inside demanded genuine tribal sovereignty and a review of treaty violations. Firefights erupted sporadically; two activists were killed and a federal marshal was paralyzed. National media coverage brought Indigenous issues into American living rooms with unprecedented intensity. The siege ended in May with negotiated surrender, but its impact reverberated far beyond Pine Ridge. The occupation catalyzed reforms in federal Indian policy, inspired a generation of Native activists, and forced Americans to confront uncomfortable truths about broken promises and ongoing injustice. Wounded Knee became both a literal and symbolic reclamation—of land, of history, and of the right to be heard after centuries of being silenced.   At Wounded Knee, activists reclaimed sacred ground and demanded justice long denied

27 February

February 27: Thirty Years of Catching Them All

February 27: Thirty Years of Catching Them All On this day in 1996, two small Game Boy cartridges went on sale in Japan and quietly launched what would become the highest-grossing media franchise in human history. On February 27, 1996, a game developer named Satoshi Tajiri watched his six years of obsessive work go on sale at Japanese game shops. Pocket Monsters Red and Pocket Monsters Green — two cartridges for Nintendo's aging Game Boy handheld — had nearly been cancelled multiple times during development, nearly bankrupted the studio that made them, and arrived with modest expectations. Thirty years later, to the day, The Pokémon Company is celebrating an anniversary that no one in the industry saw coming: Pokémon has become the single highest-grossing media franchise of all time, surpassing Star Wars, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and Hello Kitty, having generated over $150 billion in revenue across games, trading cards, animation, merchandise, and film. From a Child's Bug Collection to a Global Empire The origin of Pokémon is one of the most improbable creative stories in entertainment history. Satoshi Tajiri, who grew up catching insects in the rice paddies and streams outside Tokyo, watched those natural spaces disappear to urban development throughout his childhood. The longing to recapture that experience — the thrill of discovery, the joy of collecting, the simple wonder of finding something alive hiding under a rock — became the philosophical backbone of his game. It took him six years to build it. His studio, Game Freak, ran out of money multiple times. Staff went without salaries. Nintendo's internal teams were skeptical. But Tajiri's producer, Shigeru Miyamoto — the creator of Mario — believed in it, and on February 27, 1996, the games shipped. The trading mechanic, which required players to connect their Game Boys with a physical link cable to exchange creatures, was a stroke of design genius: no single cartridge contained every Pokémon, making connection with other players not just fun but necessary. Scarcity and community, baked directly into the game's architecture. Today, on the franchise's 30th Pokémon Day, the scale of what grew from those two Game Boy cartridges is nearly incomprehensible. There are now 1,025 individual Pokémon species. The trading card game has sold over 47 billion cards worldwide. The animated series has run for nearly three decades across hundreds of episodes. Pokémon Go, released in 2016, briefly became a worldwide cultural phenomenon, sending hundreds of millions of people into parks and streets with their phones held aloft. This morning, The Pokémon Company marked the milestone with a global Pokémon Presents broadcast, revealing new games and a year's worth of anniversary celebrations — including the re-release of the original FireRed and LeafGreen on Nintendo Switch, first-ever official LEGO Pokémon sets, and plans for live events designed for the generation of adults who grew up as the franchise's very first players.   Satoshi Tajiri built Pokémon from a childhood memory — the joy of catching insects in the fields and streams outside Tokyo, and the wish to share that wonder with every child who had never experienced it. What Pokémon's 30-year arc reveals, perhaps more than anything, is the staying power of a genuinely original idea rooted in universal human feeling. The franchise survived the death of the Game Boy, the rise of mobile gaming, the fragmentation of entertainment, and the churn of generational taste by doing something elegantly simple: it kept the wonder of discovery at its center. Parents who played the original games in elementary school are now introducing their own children to the same Pikachu, the same Charmander, the same opening question — "Are you a boy or a girl?" — that greeted them on a small gray screen in 1996 or 1998. That continuity, across three decades and four generations of players, is not just a commercial achievement. It is a small, peculiar, and genuinely touching piece of cultural history — the story of a man who missed catching bugs as a child, and gave that feeling to the world.

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