Stu Hilborn – Fuel Injection

Stu Hilborn

He designed the engine system that changed motorsport forever while sitting on a military base with no way to test it. Just paper, a chemistry background, and calculations done entirely by hand.

Stu Hilborn was born in Calgary in 1917 and grew up in Southern California, a speed-obsessed kid who found his way to the dry lake beds of the Mojave Desert in the late 1930s where hot rodders pushed their cars as fast as they could go. He bought a used Model A with no engine, found a Ford flathead, and started building something fast.

He met Eddie Miller, a former Indianapolis driver who taught him the fundamentals — including how to grind custom camshafts with nothing but a bench grinder and a steady hand. No computers. No CNC machines. Skill and patience.

The car was fast. Hilborn wanted faster.

He found a streamliner and bought it on December 7, 1941. Then heard the news from Pearl Harbor. He stored the car, joined the Army Air Forces, and served as an aerial gunner. And while stationed on a military base with no test equipment and no machine shop, he began designing something no one had yet managed to make work on a racing engine.

A mechanical fuel injection system. On paper. Entirely by hand.

He used his chemistry background to calculate nozzle sizes, fuel pressure, and mixture ratios — everything a dyno and fuel flow measuring equipment would normally tell you — worked out in equations in his spare time between duties.

After discharge, he went back to the streamliner. He ran carburetors first while he refined the injection system. His peers were skeptical. Most told him the concept would never work for a race car. He tested anyway — careful, methodical, fixing what failed and trying again.

In 1948, Howie Wilson drove the Hilborn streamliner through 150 miles per hour at the dry lakes. The first hot rod ever to break that barrier. The superiority over carburetors was undeniable. The streamliner made the cover of Hot Rod Magazine.

Word spread fast.

Hilborn designed an injection system for the Offenhauser engine — the dominant powerplant in midget racing. A dyno test by the Offy makers showed injection boosted power by ten percent. The results in competition were immediate. Starting in 1949, Hilborn-equipped cars began winning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Within a few years, Hilborn injectors were standard at Indy.

Then drag racing. Then land speed records. Then circle track. Then every form of motorsport that cared about winning.

Over four decades, Hilborn fuel injection powered cars in virtually every major racing discipline. From naturally aspirated gas engines to supercharged fuel dragsters. From dry lake beds to the Brickyard.

The iconic “stacks” — flared tubes rising directly out of each cylinder — became one of the most recognizable sights in American motorsport. You knew a Hilborn car when you saw one.

Many companies eventually entered the fuel injection market. But Stu Hilborn was first. He designed it in the military. Built it in a garage. Proved it on a salt flat. And made carburetors obsolete for anyone serious about speed.

Stu Hilborn died on December 16, 2013, at age 96. He was inducted into the SEMA Hall of Fame and the Hot Rod Magazine Speed Parts Hall of Fame. His systems are still manufactured and raced today.

He started with a Model A that had no engine and a mentor who ground camshafts on a bench grinder.

He ended as the man who changed how engines breathe.

Castor Oil vs Lotions and Serums

Castor Oil vs Lotions and Serums

Are you stuck in a cycle of applying lotions and serums nightly, only to wake up with dry skin again?

Most conventional skincare products aren’t actually absorbed into the deep layers of your skin. Instead, they sit on your skin’s outer layer until they evaporate or are washed away.

Not only that, but many contain alcohol, which actually dries and dehydrates your skin further.

Castor oil, on the other hand, has the power to penetrate all three layers of your skin.

It has been used for generations in wellness and beauty routines, and for good reason!

Castor oil is rich in ricinoleic acid, a unique fatty acid linked to moisturizing, soothing, and protective properties.

It can help eliminate dark spots and wrinkles and is very hydrating for your skin. It also contains vitamin E, which is crucial for maintaining skin barrier function.

When applied regularly, castor oil can leave your skin feeling smooth, nourished, and moisturized.

Find out how to 10x the results of using castor oil:

Nile Rodgers

Nile Rodgers

Most people know the songs. Very few know the man who made them. And almost nobody knows just how close the world came to never hearing any of them at all.

His name is Nile Rodgers.

He was born on September 19, 1952, in New York City — into a world that was difficult from the very beginning. His mother was just 14 years old when he was born. His stepfather and mother were heroin users, though by all accounts loving in their own chaotic way. His biological father, a travelling percussionist, was rarely present. Nile grew up moving between New York and Los Angeles, between relatives and neighbourhoods, learning how to observe the world around him long before he fully understood it.

Then, somewhere along the way, he picked up a guitar.

Music became everything. As a teenager, he was already playing professionally. He performed with the Sesame Street band on PBS. He joined the legendary house band at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem, where he backed Aretha Franklin and Parliament-Funkadelic. These were not small stages — they were masterclasses in rhythm, timing, and how to make an audience feel something.

In 1970, Nile met a young bassist named Bernard Edwards. They connected immediately over a shared obsession with precision, groove, and the idea that music could be both intelligent and irresistible. They played together for years, building something new. By 1977, they had finally shaped it into a band. They called it Chic. Their first single, Dance, Dance, Dance, became a hit. Then came Everybody Dance. People were starting to pay attention.

Which brings us to that New Year’s Eve.

Studio 54 in New York was the most famous nightclub on the planet. Celebrities, artists, and icons danced there every night under glittering lights. Singer Grace Jones had invited Nile and Bernard to come watch her perform. They dressed in their finest clothes and walked through the freezing New York night to the back door of the club. They told the doorman they were personal friends of Grace Jones.

The doorman slammed the door in their faces.

Grace had forgotten to put their names on the list. They knocked again. The doorman told them, in the rudest possible way, to go away. And that was that.

Nile and Bernard walked back to Nile’s nearby apartment — cold, embarrassed, and furious. They opened two bottles of Dom Pérignon champagne, which Nile has always jokingly called “rock and roll mouthwash.” They started drinking. And then, because they were musicians and musicians cannot stop being musicians even when they are angry, they started playing.

Out of their frustration came a groove. A furious, irresistible, brilliant groove.

The chorus they sang first was, in Nile’s own words, not exactly suitable for radio. It was a direct message aimed at the doorman. But as the song grew, they realised they needed to clean it up. “Freak off” didn’t work. Then, finally, they landed on it.

“Freak out.”

Le Freak was born.

Released in September 1978, the song became an absolute phenomenon. It hit number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. It sold more than 7 million copies. It became the biggest-selling single in the entire history of Atlantic Records — a title it still holds to this day. The very club that had slammed a door in their faces was now playing their song all night long, every night.

But Nile Rodgers was nowhere near finished.

In 1979, Chic released Good Times. Its bass line was so perfectly constructed, so hypnotically groovy, that a group of young musicians in the Bronx building something brand new heard it and knew immediately what they needed to do. The Sugarhill Gang built Rapper’s Delight on top of it. That song became one of the first hip-hop records to achieve mainstream success. The DNA of an entirely new genre of music ran directly through Nile Rodgers’ guitar playing.

Then the disco backlash came. Clubs burned disco records. Radio stations turned against the sound. Chic, one of the most musically sophisticated bands of the era, was swept aside along with everything else labelled disco. It could have ended Nile Rodgers’ career.

Instead, it launched a second one.

In 1983, David Bowie approached him. They worked together at the Power Station studio in New York. Bowie told Nile simply, “I want you to make hits.” Nile did exactly that. The Let’s Dance album went on to sell 11 million copies and became Bowie’s biggest commercial success. Let’s Dance was the only Bowie single to hit number 1 in both the United States and the United Kingdom.

The following year, a young Madonna came to him. Together they made Like a Virgin — the album that launched her into global superstardom. He produced Diana Ross. He worked with Duran Duran, Mick Jagger, Sister Sledge, and the B-52s. He kept going, year after year, with barely a pause.

Then, in 2013, he did something remarkable.

He returned to the very top of the charts — by producing Daft Punk’s Get Lucky, from their album Random Access Memories. That same year, he announced publicly that he had beaten cancer. He was 60 years old, standing at the peak of the music world again, healthier and more creative than ever.

Here is the number that still does not feel quite real. Nile Rodgers has written, produced, or performed on records that have sold more than 750 million albums and 100 million singles worldwide. There are very, very few musicians in the entire history of recorded music who can say anything close to that.

But here is what makes the story truly remarkable.

Through all of it, Nile Rodgers has never demanded to be seen. He does not swagger. He does not dominate. His guitar style, which he calls “chucking,” is built on tiny, precise, almost invisible movements. You can barely see his right hand when he plays. But the sound that comes out of it has shaped disco, funk, rock, hip-hop, and pop music across five decades — in a way that almost no single human being ever has.

He lost Bernard Edwards to pneumonia in 1996, while the two were on tour together in Japan. It was one of the worst moments of his life. He still tours under the name Nile Rodgers and Chic. He still picks up his beloved Fender Stratocaster, nicknamed “The Hitmaker,” and plays like a man who cannot quite believe how lucky he is to still be doing what he loves.

Here is the lesson buried inside his extraordinary story.

You do not have to be the loudest person in the room to leave the biggest mark on the world. Nile Rodgers took a cold, humiliating New Year’s Eve, a slammed door, two bottles of champagne, and an old guitar — and turned all of it into pure joy that has now been heard by hundreds of millions of people across five decades.

He never tried to be the star. He tried to make everyone around him sound like stars. And in doing so, he became one of the most important musicians who ever lived.

So the next time you hear that bright, chopped, chiming guitar riff somewhere in the background — and you feel your body start to move before your brain even notices — remember.

That is probably Nile Rodgers. Quietly doing what he has always done.

Making the whole world dance. One perfect note at a time.

The Slaves Who Survived

The Slaves

A French ship wrecked on a sandbank in the Indian Ocean in 1761. The crew spent 2 months building a rescue raft. Then they sailed away and left 80 enslaved people behind. They promised to come back. They never did. For 15 years, those people waited. What they built while they waited is one of the most extraordinary stories in human history.

The ship was called L’Utile. The word means “useful” in French.

It belonged to the French East India Company. It had departed from the port of Bayonne in November 1760, and by July 1761 it was sailing through the Indian Ocean, loaded with a hidden and illegal cargo.

160 Malagasy men, women, and children. Enslaved people purchased in Madagascar just days earlier, packed into the ship’s hold, bound for the French colony of Île de France — the island now known as Mauritius — where they would be sold to work on plantations.

The slave trade was officially prohibited in that region at the time. The captain, Jean de Lafargue, was trafficking human beings in secret, for profit.

On the night of July 31, 1761, L’Utile struck a reef.

The water rushed in fast. The enslaved people were below deck. The hatches had been locked. Approximately 70 of them drowned before they could get out.

The survivors — French crew and approximately 80 Malagasy captives — made it to a tiny sandbank nearby. A place so small and so barren that almost no one knew it existed.

No trees. No fresh water. Barely 1 square kilometer of coral sand, battered constantly by the winds of the Indian Ocean.

The nearest land was 300 miles away.

For 2 months, the French crew and the enslaved survivors worked side by side, salvaging timber from the wreck, building a small vessel they named La Providence. By September 27, 1761, it was ready.

It could not carry everyone.

The French crew climbed aboard La Providence.

The 80 Malagasy survivors were left on the sand.

The captain made a promise before he sailed. He said a rescue ship would come. He said they would not be forgotten.

Then the sails disappeared over the horizon.

And the world forgot them completely.

Here is what nobody ever talks about.

When the French crew arrived back at Madagascar, they reported the shipwreck. They reported that enslaved people had been left behind. A naval officer named Castellan du Vernet began pushing for a rescue mission almost immediately. He wrote letters. He made requests. He spent years begging the colonial administration to send a ship.

The administration ignored him. The enslaved people left on the sandbank had been smuggled cargo — illegal property. There was no legal obligation. There was no political will. There was no profit motive in saving them.

So du Vernet kept writing.

And on the sandbank — which had no name yet, no place on any map that mattered — 80 people looked at the horizon and waited.

And waited.

And waited.

They had almost nothing.

No trees meant no wood for building. No freshwater meant they had to survive on what fell from the sky. The island was regularly swept by cyclones that flattened everything in their path.

But they did not simply sit in the sand and wait to die.

They organized.

They built shelters from the debris of the wrecked ship — timber beams, broken planks, salvaged iron. When the timber rotted away, they used what the island had in abundance: coral. They stacked coral blocks into low walls, creating small, wind-resistant structures that archaeologists would find 230 years later, still standing in the sand.

They built a communal oven from coral and metal salvaged from the wreck. They repaired copper cooking utensils. They learned to eat what the island gave them — sea turtles, bird eggs, fish pulled from the reef.

They wove clothing from the feathers of seabirds because their own garments had long since disintegrated in the salt and the heat.

They kept a fire burning.

For 15 years, on a tiny sandbank in the middle of the Indian Ocean with no trees and no resources and no reason given to them by the outside world to believe anyone was coming, they kept a signal fire burning day and night.

In 1772 — 11 years after the abandonment — a rescue ship called La Sauterelle finally arrived within sight of the island. A small boat carrying 2 men was sent toward the shore.

It was smashed apart on the reef.

1 man swam back to the ship. The other swam to the island.

Because of the violent surf and the dangerous coral reef, the rescue ship could not land. It turned around and sailed away.

The survivors on the island watched it go.

2 more ships came in the years that followed. Neither could navigate the reef safely enough to make landfall. Both turned back.

The fire kept burning.

Then, on November 29, 1776 — exactly 15 years, 3 months, and 29 days after L’Utile had wrecked — a French corvette called La Dauphine appeared on the horizon. Its captain was a naval officer named Jacques Marie Boudin de Tromelin.

He found a way through the reef.

He sent his men ashore.

Of the 80 people left on that sandbank in 1761, only 8 remained.

7 women.

And 1 eight-month-old baby boy — born on the island, who had never in his entire short life seen another piece of land.

Among the survivors were a grandmother, her daughter, and the baby — 3 generations of a family that had held together across 15 years of abandonment and loss on a sandbank in the middle of the ocean.

Archaeologists who excavated Tromelin Island beginning in 2006, sponsored by UNESCO, found the coral shelters still standing. They found the communal oven. They found the repaired copper utensils. They found the traces of a community that had organized itself with extraordinary discipline and ingenuity across 15 years of impossible conditions.

They found evidence of a society. Not simply survivors clinging to life, but people who had built something — cooking systems, shelter systems, community organization — out of coral and wreckage and sheer refusal to give up.

What they did not find was any indication of who the survivors were.

The Malagasy people left on Tromelin Island left no written records. They had no way to write. They had no paper. No ink. No way to tell the world who they were, where they came from, what they had lost, or what they had built.

Their names are unknown.

The 7 women rescued in 1776 were taken to Mauritius. The governor at the time — more progressive than his predecessors — declared that because they had been trafficked illegally, they could not legally be considered enslaved. He granted them their freedom.

They had survived 15 years of abandonment and were then told they were free.

The island was eventually named Tromelin Island, after the captain who finally came.

Not after the 80 people who survived there. Not after the 7 women who kept the fire burning for 15 years. Not after the grandmother who held her family together across an ocean of silence.

After the man who arrived in a ship.

That detail sits uncomfortably, and it should.

Because the real story of Tromelin Island is not about the rescue.

It is about the 15 years before the rescue. It is about people who were stolen from their homeland, trafficked across an ocean, survived a shipwreck, and were then abandoned on a sandbank by the people who had enslaved them — and who responded not with despair, but with ingenuity, organization, community, and an unbroken signal fire that said to the empty horizon, every single day for 15 years:

We are still here.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded — that the most extraordinary acts of human courage and resilience in history were often performed by people whose names we will never know.

Jim O’Connor

Jim O'Connor

(Tom: We can all do something to help others, even something as simple as cuddling a baby. He obviously did it very well.)

His name was Jim O’Connor. And he had been hiding the biggest secret in Los Angeles for 20 years.

Jim O’Connor grew up in Brooklyn, New York – in a neighbourhood where you learned early that life asked hard questions and you’d better have hard answers. He served 3 years in the United States Navy, aboard the USS Enterprise, during the Vietnam War. He came home, earned his engineering degree, and moved to California. He became a mathematics teacher.

If you went to St. Francis High School in La Cañada – a Catholic prep school for boys in the quiet suburbs of Los Angeles – you knew Mr. O’Connor by reputation before you ever walked into his classroom.

Strict. Exacting. Relentless. He ran his algebra and calculus classes with the same military precision he’d learned aboard a warship in the South China Sea. No nonsense. No shortcuts. No excuses. The boys who came through his classroom either rose to meet his standards or they didn’t, and he was equally fine with both outcomes as long as they gave him everything they had.

“If you have a class full of 32 teenage boys,” he once told a reporter, “you better have some discipline.”

Nobody who sat in Jim O’Connor’s classroom would have called him soft.

1989. Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

A friend asks Jim to come in and donate blood. It is a simple request – Jim has Type O negative blood, the universal donor type, the kind that can go into any patient in an emergency regardless of blood group. The hospital is always in need of it. Jim shows up, rolls up his sleeve, and gives.

He keeps coming back.

Over the first several years, he donates blood again and again, quietly accumulating a record that nobody at the school knows about. And while he is there, sitting in the donation centre, he watches the hospital volunteers move through the wards. He watches them carry small things – wrapped in blankets, held against shoulders.

He asks a nurse what the programme is.

She explains. The hospital’s TLC Volunteers are a tiny group – a handful out of more than 550 total hospital volunteers – selected for the most delicate work, going to the rooms of infants who are sick, frightened, or simply alone. Babies whose parents have to work. Babies whose parents are too overwhelmed to be there every hour. Babies who have been abandoned, or are waiting for foster placement, or who have been born dependent on substances and spend their early days in a state of physical distress that makes everything – light, sound, touch – almost unbearable.

These babies need to be held. Rocked. Sung to. Not by a machine or a monitor. By a person.

Jim asks how to sign up.

3 days a week. For 20 years.

He builds it into his life the way other people build in a gym routine or a church service. Monday, Wednesday, Friday – or something close enough. He finishes at school and he goes to the hospital. He walks through the ward to the room where the nurses tell him he is needed most. He sits down. He picks up the baby. He holds it against his chest and he rocks it.

He feeds them. He walks up and down the corridor at 11 o’clock at night, a 60-something man in a quiet hospital hallway, holding a sick infant and humming something low and steady. He learns what each baby responds to – which ones need movement, which ones need stillness, which ones need sound, which ones just need warmth and the particular certainty that comes from being held by someone who is not going anywhere.

Sherry Nolan, the clinical manager of the medical unit, watches him work for years. “He holds them, feeds them, walks around with them, gets to know them,” she says. “He can always coax a smile out of them. They just stare at him adoringly. He can get the crabbiest baby to calm down. He’s just a natural-born cuddler.”

Back at St. Francis, his students have no idea.

For 20 years, the man they know as the hardest grader in the school – the one who has never in living memory given an easy ride to anyone – spends 3 days every week sitting in a darkened hospital room, whispering to a sick baby, willing it toward calm.

He does not tell a single colleague. He does not tell his students. He does not want a story written about it. He just shows up.

The blood donor plaque.

In the early 2010s, 2 senior boys from St. Francis – Pat McGoldrick and Michael Tinglof – are put in charge of organising a student blood drive. They go out to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles for a planning meeting. And the moment they mention which school they attend, something strange happens.

Everyone they speak to lights up.

Hospital staff, nurses, administrators – all of them saying some version of the same thing, “Oh, St. Francis! Do you know Jim O’Connor? Isn’t he just wonderful?”

Pat and Michael look at each other.

Pat wanders into the blood donor centre and finds the wall – the plaque listing the hospital’s top blood donors, the people who have given more than anyone else. He scans down the names.

At the very top, in the number one position, is the name of his calculus teacher.

Pat goes home and tells his classmates. Nobody believes him.

When the CBS News story breaks – a journalist had heard about Jim and filmed a short piece that finds its way online – it travels around the world in days. Millions of people watch the footage of a 70-year-old retired Navy veteran with a grey crew cut sitting in a hospital chair, holding a tiny baby against his chest, rocking slowly, not saying anything. Just there. Just present.

His students watch it in silence.

The man who had spent 38 years making their mathematical lives difficult had donated 72 gallons of blood to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. He had volunteered there 3 days a week for 20 years. He was, by every measure the staff could offer, the most dedicated volunteer they had ever had.

And he had done all of it without ever once mentioning it to a single person at school.

When a reporter asked why he had kept it secret for so long, Jim O’Connor looked genuinely puzzled by the question.

“I wasn’t hiding it,” he said. “I just didn’t think it was anyone else’s business.”

Share this with someone who still believes that what a person shows the world is who they really are.

Johnny Carson’s Life-Changing Lesson: How a 16-Year-Old Girl Revolutionized The Tonight Show

Johnny Carson and Jennifer

Johnny Carson asked a 16-year-old blind girl in his audience what she thought of the show. Her answer made him forget his script, stop the taping, and completely change how The Tonight Show was produced for the next decade. It was October 23rd, 1982. The Tonight Show was taping its Friday night episode at NBC’s Burbank Studios.

Johnny Carson had just finished his monologue to thunderous applause. As he settled behind his desk to begin the audience Q and A segment, his eyes swept across the crowd. That’s when he noticed something unusual in the fourth row. A beautiful golden retriever sat perfectly still at the feet of a teenage girl wearing the distinctive harness of a guide dog.

The girl wore dark sunglasses despite the indoor setting. She sat between her parents, her hands resting on the dog’s head, a peaceful smile on her face. Johnny had seen guy dogs before, but rarely at his show. Something about this girl’s serene expression amid the chaos of a television taping intrigued him. “I see we have a very special guest in the audience tonight,” Johnny said, pointing toward the fourth row.

“Young lady with a beautiful guide dog. What’s your name?” The girl turned her head toward the sound of Johnny’s voice, her smile growing wider. “My name is Jennifer Walsh, Mr. Carson. And this is Harper.” Harper’s a handsome dog, Johnny said warmly. How long have you two been together? Three years, Jennifer replied, her voice clear and confident.

Since I was 13, he’s my best friend. The audience gave a warm, oh, at this, and Johnny smiled, but what he did next would set in motion a conversation that he’d remember for the rest of his life. Jennifer, I have to ask, you’ve been in our audience for about 45 minutes now. What do you think of the show so far? It was meant as a light-hearted question, the kind Johnny asked all the time. He expected something simple.

It’s great or I love it. What he didn’t expect was the answer that would stop him mid-performance. Jennifer tilted her head thoughtfully, her hand still resting on Harper’s head. When she spoke, her voice was gentle, but carried a weight that seemed to make the entire studio hold its breath. “Mr. Carson, I think your show is wonderful. I really do. I listen to the Tonight Show every single night before bed. It’s my favorite program on television. But if I’m being completely honest, I have to tell you something. I don’t actually know what your show looks like. I don’t know what you look like. I don’t know what your guests look like or what they’re wearing or what’s happening on stage when everyone laughs, but nobody says anything. Half the time I’m laughing because everyone else is laughing, but I don’t actually know what’s funny.”

The studio went completely silent. Johnny’s prepared follow-up question died on his lips. He sat at his desk, staring at this teenage girl who’ just articulated something that had never occurred to him in 20 years of hosting.

Jennifer continued, not in an accusatory way, but with a simple matter-of-fact honesty that made her words even more powerful. “Like right now for instance, based on the silence, I’m guessing you’re doing something with your face. Maybe that eyebrow thing you do that everyone always talks about. But I don’t know. I just know it got quiet.”

Johnny was indeed doing his signature raised eyebrow expression, a gesture so famous that every comedian in America had imitated it at some point, but he’d never considered that it meant nothing to someone who couldn’t see it. “You’re right,” Johnny said quietly into his microphone, his voice uncharacteristically subdued.

“I am doing the eyebrow thing.” “See, now I know,” Jennifer said with a gentle laugh, “but usually I don’t. And don’t get me wrong, I love your show. Your jokes are brilliant. Your interviews are fascinating, and your voice is so warm and welcoming. But there’s this whole other show happening visually that I’m completely missing.”

“The physical comedy, the gestures, the faces people make. My parents try to describe things to me, but you can’t describe everything. Some nights I feel like I’m listening to a radio show that everyone else is watching as a TV show.” Johnny sat down his note cards. His producer was probably panicking in the control booth, wondering why Johnny had abandoned the plan segment. But Johnny didn’t care.

For the first time in his career, he was genuinely shaken by something an audience member had said. “Jennifer,” Johnny said, leaning forward on his desk. “I’ve been doing the show for 20 years. I’ve interviewed thousands of people. I’ve performed for millions of viewers, and in all that time, I never once stopped to think about what my show is like for someone who can’t see it.

“Most people don’t,” Jennifer said kindly. “It’s not your fault. People who can see don’t usually think about people who can’t. It’s just how the world works.”

“But it shouldn’t be”, Johnny said. And there was something in his voice, a mix of shame and determination that made the audience shift uncomfortably in their seats.

“You pay the same money for a ticket that everyone else does. You watch, or rather listen, to the same show everyone else watches. Why should you get half the experience?” Jennifer shrugged with a wisdom beyond her 16 years. “Because that’s just how TV is made, Mr. Carson, it’s a visual medium. It’s not designed for people like me.” Johnny stood up from his desk and walked to the edge of the stage, looking down at Jennifer in the fourth row.

Ed McMahon watched from his seat, having no idea what Johnny was about to do. Neither did anyone else. “What would help?” Johnny asked. “What could we do differently that would make this show more accessible to you?” Jennifer looked surprised, as if she’d never expected anyone to ask her that question, let alone Johnny Carson on live television.

Her mother, seated beside her, put a hand on her daughter’s shoulder, equally shocked. “Well,” Jennifer said slowly, “it would help if someone described what’s happening. Not everything that would be annoying and interrupt the flow, but the visual stuff that’s important. Like when you pointed at me earlier, someone could have said, “Johnny is pointing at you” so I’d know you were talking to me instead of someone near me. Or when you do physical comedy, if you just narrated what you’re doing, even briefly, I’m making a face or I’m doing this gesture or whatever. It doesn’t have to be much, just enough so I’m not in the dark, literally.” She laughed at her own joke and the audience laughed with her, but it was a different kind of laughter than the usual Tonight Show laughter.

It was the sound of people having their eyes open to something they’d never considered. Johnny nodded slowly, processing everything Jennifer had said. Then he looked directly at the camera, addressing not just the studio audience, but the millions of viewers at home. “Ladies and gentlemen, he said, I’ve just been educated by a 16-year-old girl.”

“Jennifer is absolutely right. We’ve been making this show for 20 years without considering that there might be people watching or trying to watch who can’t see what we’re doing. That ends tonight.” He turned back to Jennifer. “Would you do me a favor? Would you stay after the taping and talk to me and my producers about what we could do better? Because I don’t want you to ever have to guess what’s happening on my show again.”

Jennifer’s face lit up with a smile that seemed to brighten the entire studio. “I’d be honored, Mr. Carson.” The audience erupted in applause, and Johnny returned to his desk, but the rest of the show had a different energy. Johnny found himself naturally describing his physical actions. “I’m looking at Ed now. I’m shaking my head.”

“I’m doing an exaggerated shrug”, incorporating Jennifer’s feedback in real time. After the taping, Johnny did something unprecedented. Instead of going straight to his dressing room, he brought Jennifer, her parents, and his production team into a conference room for an hour-ong discussion about accessibility.

Jennifer explained how she experienced television. She described the frustration of loving shows but missing visual elements. She talked about descriptive audio tracks in movies. She suggested television could do something similar. Johnny listened to every word, taking notes, asking questions. His producer, Fred Dordova, initially resistant, gradually came around as he listened to Jennifer’s clear explanations.

“What you’re describing”, Fred said eventually, is basically adding a narrator to our show for visual information. “Not a narrator exactly”, Jennifer clarified, “more like occasional descriptions, just filling in the gaps. It wouldn’t have to be constant, just when something visual happens that’s important to understanding what’s going on.”

By the end of the meeting, Johnny had made a decision that would change television broadcasting across America. Starting the following week, The Tonight Show began incorporating descriptive elements. Johnny would occasionally narrate his own physical comedy or Ed McMahon would briefly describe what was happening on stage.

Gradually, it became more sophisticated. The show worked with the American Council of the Blind to develop best practices. They trained staff on when and how to describe visual elements. They experimented with different approaches, always soliciting feedback from blind viewers. Within 6 months, the Tonight Show had developed a secondary audio program, SAP, that provided audio descriptions for blind viewers.

A trained describer would narrate the visual elements in real time, filling in what Jennifer had called the gaps. But Johnny didn’t stop there. He used his influence in national platform to advocate for broader television accessibility. He testified before Congress about the importance of descriptive programming. He lobbied NBC executives to implement accessibility features across all their programming..

The moment a 16-year-old girl changed television forever.

Walter Kohn

Walter Kohn

The morning after Walter Kohn won the Nobel Prize, he did something remarkably ordinary. He walked across campus.

It was 1998, and the quiet streets of Santa Barbara were buzzing. Kohn had just been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his groundbreaking density-functional theory — work that had reshaped the way scientists understood the quantum behaviour of electrons. His face was in the student newspaper. People knew who he was.

Two students spotted him walking in the opposite direction. One of them turned around, jogged back, and asked point-blank: “Are you the guy who won the Nobel Prize?” Kohn said yes. Both students wrapped him in a spontaneous, warm hug — then kept walking.

But then one of them came back.

They were on their way to a chemistry exam, she explained. Could they ask him just one quick question? Kohn said yes — and then, by his own admission, immediately started praying.

Because here was the brutal reality of his situation. Walter Kohn was, at his core, a theoretical physicist. Yes, he had won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, but his work lived in the rarefied air of advanced quantum mechanics — the kind of science that operates at the bleeding edge where chemistry and physics blur into one. Ask him about electron density approximations? Brilliant. Ask him what happens in a first-year general chemistry lab? Suddenly the Nobel laureate is sweating.

The more basic the question, he knew, the more likely he was to have absolutely no idea how to answer it.

So he stood there on that sun-drenched California footpath, a man whose name would now be spoken alongside Curie, Bohr, and Pauling, silently begging the universe to throw him a lifeline.

And then she asked the question.

Kohn listened carefully. And something clicked. The question wasn’t really a chemistry question at all — it was a physics question. Right in his wheelhouse. The exact territory he had spent decades mastering.

He gave them, by his own cheerful assessment, a brilliant answer. The students were genuinely impressed. They headed off to their exam. And Walter Kohn walked on across campus, relieved, amused, and perhaps reminded that even a Nobel Prize comes with no guarantee you know what’s on somebody else’s test.

Image Credit to Jtk33 (Wikimedia Commons) (Restored & Colorized)

Richard Joyner

Richard Joyner

The town of Conetoe, North Carolina barely exists on a map. Population, 300. Mostly poor.

The nearest grocery store sits 10 miles away. That’s what a food desert looks like – farmland stretching in every direction, and not a single fresh vegetable within easy reach.

1986. Conetoe, North Carolina.

Richard Joyner already knows this land. He grew up here – one of 13 children in a sharecropping family – and spent every summer bent over crops under the eastern North Carolina sun. The moment he turned 18, he joined the Army and left. He swore he would never come back.

But he came back.

He came back to lead Conetoe Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. And in a town this small, serving a congregation means standing at the graveside more than anyone should ever have to.

The deaths come early and often. Diabetes. High blood pressure. Obesity. Edgecombe County ranks 97th out of 100 North Carolina counties in health and economic well-being. These diseases don’t wait for old age here.

2005. One year. 30 funerals.

In a single 12-month stretch, Joyner buries 30 members of his congregation. Not elderly men and women at the end of long lives. These are people under the age of 32. Every single death is preventable.

“Diabetes, high blood pressure – when we first got started, we counted 30 funerals in one year,” he says. “I couldn’t ignore it anymore. I was spending more time at funerals than anywhere else.”

Here’s what makes it worse, the town is completely surrounded by farmland. Food grows in every direction. But none of it reaches the 300 people who live here. The nearest grocery is 10 miles down the road, most families have no reliable way to get there, and what’s cheap at the corner store is almost never fresh. So people eat what they can afford. And they keep dying young.

Joyner looks out at his congregation every Sunday and sees what is coming. People he loves. People 100 pounds overweight, moving slower each week, their bodies giving up piece by piece. He knows exactly what happens next if nothing changes.

“It just started to feel unconscionable,” he later says, “that you would see someone 100 pounds overweight on Sunday and not say anything about it.”

He decides to stop being quiet. And then he decides to do something.

2007. An empty church lawn. A completely different idea.

Joyner walks outside and starts to dig. He turns the grass around the church into a garden – rows of vegetables, herbs, and fruit. Then he makes a decision nobody sees coming, he goes looking for the kids.

Not the easy ones. He goes after the ones failing in school. The ones drifting toward trouble. The ones with nowhere safe to be after 3 p.m. He puts a shovel in their hands. He teaches them how soil works, how seeds grow, how a living thing needs tending every single day. He makes them responsible for something alive. Something that needs them.

One boy arrives – restless, struggling with attention, full of energy with nowhere to go. Joyner looks at him and says, “Get out in the field and have fun.”

The boy pauses. “Can I take my shoes off?”

Joyner grins. “Yeah, pull your shoes off.”

The boy sprints barefoot through the rows, crouching down to press his fingers into the dirt, tasting raw vegetables for the first time in his life. Over the months that follow, his teachers watch something change. His focus sharpens. His grades climb. His whole way of moving through the world shifts.

This is what the garden is actually growing.

Today. An oasis where there used to be only grief.

The Conetoe Family Life Center now manages more than 20 plots of land – including a 25-acre site. More than 80 young people help plan, plant, and harvest. They manage beehives, produce honey, and pollinate the crops themselves. Together they grow tens of thousands of pounds of fresh food every year – all of it given away, free, to families who need it most. Roughly 1,500 people are fed every single week.

In 2015, CNN named Richard Joyner one of its Top 10 Heroes of the year. The center has expanded to 21 locations across 4 counties – and it has united Baptists, Muslims, and Unitarians, all working side by side in the same dirt.

“We can grow more medicine through the plants than we can buy,” Joyner says. “And there are no side effects.”

He took the land his family was once forced to work as sharecroppers – land soaked in generations of injustice – and turned it into something new entirely. A place where children learn their own power. Where a community decides it will no longer eat badly and die young.

The funerals didn’t stop. But the preventable ones? That’s a very different story now.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that one person – with a shovel, a church lawn, and a heart that refuses to quit – can change the course of an entire community.