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Backcountry's Fourth of July sale is going on now — it includes deals on The North Face, Arc'Teryx, and more

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Backcountry

In addition to backyard barbecues, beach trips, and fireworks, the Fourth of July is also a great time to save — and Backcountry is having four different sales that outdoors enthusiasts will want to hear about. 

Now through July 5, you can save up to 40% on select outdoor gear, apparel, and accessories for men, women, and kids. You can also save up to 40% on summer styles from Basin and Range, up to 30% on select items from The North Face, and up to 30% on select items from Arc'Teryx.

No matter if you're shopping for bathing suits and surfing gear for all the time you'll spend at the beach, hiking and camping gear for summer excursions, or cold-weather styles to hold on to for later in the year, you'll find it here. 

We rounded up 15 of our favorite deals to help you shop quickly, but since the sale is so massive, these product categories can help you find everything else you're looking for.

Shop the Backcountry Fourth of July sale now or find info on more Fourth of July sales here.

To potentially save more on Fourth of July sales across the web, visit Business Insider Coupons for additional coupons and savings. 

Men's PrAna Broderick Shirt

$45.46 (Originally $64.95) [You save 30%]



Men's The North Face Belted Swimming Trunk

$31.47 (Originally $44.95) [You save 30%]



Men's The North Face TKA 100 Microvelour Glacier

$38.47 (Originally $74.95) [You save 30%]



Arc'teryx Atom LT Hooded Insulated Jacket

$194.25 (Originally $259) [You save 25%]



Women's Basin and Range Everyday Pocket T-Shirt

$23.99 (Originally $39.95) [You save 40%]



Women's Prana Moorea One-Piece Swimsuit

$59.46 (Originally $84.95) [You save 30%]



Women's The North Face Thermoball Hooded Insulated Jacket

$119.97 (Originally $219.95) [You save 45%]



Women's Marmot PreCip Anorak

$54.99 (Originally $89.95) [You save 39%]



Hydro Flask 18-ounce Standard Mouth Water Bottle

$16.47 (Originally $29.95) [You save 45%]



Patagonia Lightweight Black Hole 26L Backpack

$69.30 (Originally $99) [You save 30%]



Marmot Limelight 2-Person 3-Season Tent

$186.71 (Originally $248.95) [You save 25%]



Adventure Paddleboarding Allrounder MX Stand-Up Paddleboard

$624.98 (Originally $894.95) [You save 30%]



Giro Empire SLX Cycling Shoe

$244.96 (Originally $349.95) [You save 30%]



Costa Corbina 580P Polarized Sunglasses

$89.53 (Originally $199) [You save 55%]



Black Diamond Half Dome Helmet

$44.96 (Originally $59.95) [You save 25%]




I grew up eating white rice every day, but I love this protein-packed 'rice' alternative made from vegetables and legumes

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rightrice review 2

  • RightRice is a vegetable grain that tastes and feels just like traditional white rice. 
  • It's made from lentils, chickpeas, and peas, so it contains more than two times the protein and five times the fiber of white rice. But because it does still contain a little rice flour, it maintains the satisfying, chewy texture you're familiar with. 
  • I grew up on white rice, and I loved cooking with and eating RightRice. Though it's a little more expensive than traditional rice and you can only cook it on a stove top (rather than in a rice cooker), it's also more nutritious and just as tasty. 

Rice is and always will be an important part of my diet. Every night growing up, I had a bowl of fluffy and sticky white rice with my meat and veggies, a dinnertime constant as reliable as the conversations grilling my progress in school. 

This familiarity with rice made me somewhat skeptical of any alternatives for a long time. I have to admit though, the way my body processes and reacts to food has changed over the years, a reality that's making me reconsider what I eat. White rice isn't unhealthy, per se, but the emergence of alternatives made from ingredients like chickpeas shows it's entirely possible to enjoy a healthier, more nutritious version of white rice. 

I recently tried RightRice, a new grain made from a blend of more than 90% vegetables. As much as I didn't want to betray my white rice-centric upbringing, I ended up loving RightRice's taste, texture, and superior nutritional profile. 

rightrice review 3

RightRice vs. traditional white rice 

RightRice was created by Keith Belling, the founder of Popchips, a proven success in the business of better-for-you food. He loved rice, but didn't love the empty calories and carbs, so he decided to create a plant-based protein that was simultaneously delicious and good for you. 

For every 1/3 cup of RightRice, there's 10 grams of protein, five grams of fiber, and 25 grams of net carbs. Compare this to the same amount of white rice, which has 4 grams of protein, zero grams of fiber, and 39 grams of net carbs. 

RightRice isn't actually made completely from vegetables. Though it's primarily made from lentil, chickpea, and pea flour, which are what contribute the protein, fiber, iron, and other vitamins, it does still contain a little rice flour, which I think helps it maintain a more chewy and satisfying consistency. In this way, I don't see RightRice as a rice substitute. Instead, it's more of a rice enhancement. 

rightrice review 4

Cooking RightRice

It cooks in just 10 to 12 minutes in a sauce pan and is as easy to make as regular rice. Add it to a pot of boiling water, remove it from the heat, and let it stand covered for the designated time. After you fluff it with a fork, it's ready to eat. Unfortunately, if you use a rice cooker or Instant Pot, you might have to deal with some experimentation — the company says it hasn't yet found a great way to cook with these appliances yet. But in my experience, using the sauce-pan method was a perfectly easy way to cook RightRice. 

RightRice currently comes in four flavors: Original, Garlic Herb, Lemon Pepper, and Spanish. The Original is a great "base" option that goes with anything and can easily be made your own, whether you want to add your own spices for flavoring, or you just want a plain side dish. I personally used it to make fried rice, and the result was much more filling and delicious than cauliflower fried rice. If you've ever made cauliflower fried rice, you know it's really not the same as the original, but with RightRice, I could've been deceived by its texture and taste. 

I really enjoyed the flavored options too, especially the Garlic Herb. None of them were too salty, which is usually my problem with pre-flavored grains. 

You can use RightRice in any rice-based recipe you normally would — arancini, rice bowls, burritos, paella, and rice pudding, for example. It's a versatile ingredient that can feature in the dishes of many cuisines and cultures, just like traditional rice. 

rightrice review

The bottom line

The one drawback of RightRice is that it's more expensive than traditional white rice. That's to be expected, since white rice is incredibly cheap, but all things considered — taste, texture, nutritional value, versatility — the price difference is worth it. If you're thinking about easy dietary switches to make in your life, the transition from white rice to RightRice is surprisingly seamless. 

Shop the RightRice Variety Pack (pack of 6), $25.99, at Amazon

Shop all RightRice flavors at Amazon

Join the conversation about this story »

Leesa's July 4 sale is happening now — get up to 18% off, plus 2 free pillows when you buy a mattress

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Thanks to the increasing number of people who want to be able to shop online in their pajamas, there is no shortage of direct-to-consumer companies, and a healthy percentage of them are mattress startups. Why? Because you don't have to go lay down on 15 beds while an attendant hangs around to see which suits your sleep style best, there's usually no crazy delivery fee, and you get to try it out in your home without any pressure for 100 nights (as the new industry standard goes). So really, why not?

There are a lot of great direct-to-consumer mattress options to consider, and Leesa Sleep is one of them.

Leesa also happens to be running a Fourth of July sale right now — making their already accessible prices even better. Currently, you can save 15% on your entire order with the code "BUSINESSINSIDER" at checkout. If your order includes a mattress, you'll also get two free pillows. And if you order the Leesa Hybrid Mattress, you'll save 18% on it.

We've covered both the company's bread-and-butter Leesa mattress (full review here) as well as its luxury option, the Leesa Hybrid (full review here), in our best mattress buying guide, but the break down is pretty simple:

  • The Leesa Mattress: is engineered with three premium foams for cooling, body contouring, and pressure-relieving core support. Queen Size: $845 (normally $995) [You Save $150]
  • The Leesa Hybrid Mattress: combines Leesa's premium foam layers with pocket-spring coils for superior support. Queen Size: $1,440 (normally $1,695) [You Save: $306]

The company itself has done well even in a saturated direct-to-consumer mattress space thanks to an excellent customer service model and give-back program, and of course, its universally comfortable mattresses. Leesa claims its mattresses can comfortably accommodate all body shapes and types of sleepers, and that, because of its original design, you don't have to choose between a firm or a plush mattress.

Skip the awkward showroom, get your mattress delivered to your door, and spend 100 nights risk-free trying it out. No pressure. Especially considering Leesa's heavy Fourth of July markdown, if you're looking for a new mattress, you might want to check out Leesa's options right now.

Get up to 18% off your entire Leesa order with the promo code "BUSINESSINSIDER".

If you're interested in learning more before committing to a Leesa mattress, these guides will help you out: 

SEE ALSO: All the best Fourth of July sales we know of so far — on mattresses, appliances, clothes, and more

Join the conversation about this story »

All the best Fourth of July sales to shop during the holiday weekend — on mattresses, furniture, clothes, and more

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Old Navy

  • While most of us celebrate Independence Day on July 4 with fireworks and barbecues, retailers are celebrating with big sales.
  • We rounded up all the best sales happening now. From clothes to tech, you'll find the best deals below — and we'll keep updating the list as we find out more deals.
  • Since the Fourth of July falls in the middle of the week this year, you can expect most sales to be extended through the weekend.

Prime Day 2019 will be upon us soon (June 15-16), but in the meantime, there are still plenty of great sales and deals to take advantage of. The Fourth of July is often celebrated with trips to the beach, barbecues or picnics, and nighttime fireworks, but shopping has also become a highlight of the holiday.

If there's anything that you might need or want — clothes, shoes, appliances, mattresses, computers, electronics, or really anything else — you'll definitely want to check out the deals happening throughout the weekend. 

To make sure you don't miss out on all the festivities by spending too much time shopping, we rounded up all of the best Fourth of July sales going on. We've also broken down the list into categories, so you'll easily find what you're looking for.

Since July 4 falls in the middle of the week this year, you can expect most sales to be extended through the weekend. Bookmark this post and check back over the next few days, as we'll be continuously updating it with new deals.

To potentially save more this Fourth of July, you can visit Business Insider Coupons to find up-to-date promo codes for a range of online stores.

Mattresses and bedding

Allswell: 15% off mattresses and bedding with code FIREWORKS through July 6.

Avocado Green Mattress: Through July 8, take $175 off mattresses with code ORGANIC175 and an additional $50 off for verified military and veterans; $150 off a mattress + bed frame combo with code BED150; 2 free pillows with a mattress purchase with code 2FREEPILLOWS

Bear: Save 20% and get two free cloud pillows

Brooklyn Bedding: Save 25% sitewide with code INDEPENDENCE25 through July 4

Casper: Get $200 off with the code INSIDER

Crane & Canopy: Save up to 70% on luxury bedding, sheets, and home decor automatically at checkout through July 5.

DreamCloud: Get $200 off any mattress by entering your emails address for a promo code

Eco Terra: $150 off all mattresses with the code USA150

Eight: Get $300 off The Pod + free in-home professional setup or a free Gravity blanket (valued at $300) through July 8

Helix: Through July 12, take $100 off + 2 free Dream Pillows with any mattress purchase with code FOURTH100, $150 off + 2 free Dream Pillows when you spend $1,250+ with code FOURTH150, $200 off + 2 free Dream Pillows when you spend $1,750+ with code FOURTH200

Layla: $125 off a Layla mattress + 2 free pillows through July 5

Leesa: Get 18% off mattresses + 2 free pillows

Mattress Firm: Save up to $400 on best-selling mattress brands; free adjustable base with orders of $599+ with code FREEDOM

Nectar: $125 off + 2 free pillows when you purchase a mattress through July 7

PlushBeds: $1,200 off all organic latex mattresses + $450 in free bedding through July 4

Purple: Get 10% all mattress orders through July 4

Tempur-Pedic: Save $500 on any size TEMPUR-breeze mattress and get a $300 instant gift with a select mattress set purchase

Tuft & Needle: $150 off the Mint Mattress + 2 free pillows through July 7



Clothing, shoes, and accessories

Andrew Marc: Save an extra 20% sitewide with code AMSPARKS through July 3 

Banana Republic: 40% off women's styles, 50% off sale, and 30% off men's styles through July 8

Bandier: Extra 40% off sale styles

Barneys New York: Up to 75 off plus an extra 15 off with the code BNY15

BLANKNYC: 30% off sitewide with code TAKE30 and get free shipping on orders of $175 or more

Bonobos: Save an extra 30% on all sale styles with the code BOOM

Brooks Brothers: Up to 40% off men's shirts, shorts, and swimwear and an extra 25% off women's sale styles through July 7

Clarks: Save an extra 30% on sale styles with the code SALE30

Club Monaco: Save an extra 30% on sale styles, plus an extra 10% off bottoms through July 1

Coach: Save 50% off all sale styles for men and women

Cole Haan: Save up to 60% on shoes, accessories, and outerwear through July 7

eBags: 25% off sitewide and an extra 30% off customer favorites with code STARS

EyeBuy Direct: Get 30% off all lenses with code SIGHTS

Foot Locker: Take 15% off $75 or more with TAKE15, 20% off $100 or more with TAKE20, or 25% off $200 or more TAKE25

Fossil: Save up to 50% on sale styles until August 4

Frank And Oak: Save up to 50% on sale styles

Gaiam: 25% off sitewide with code USA through July 7

Gap: 40% off everything with code GREAT through July 4

GlassesUSA.com: Get 65% off and free shipping with code AMERICA65 or buy one pair of glasses and get one free with code BOGOFREE

Greats: Save 17.76% sitewide with the code FIREWORKS through July 7

Hush Puppies: 25% off select full-priced styles and extra 20% off sale styles with code SUMMERSALE through July 7

Jomashop: Save up to 75% sitewide

Kassatex: 15% off orders of $250 ore more with code JULY4TH through 

Keds: Get 60% off plus an extra 10% off with the code MAJORSALE through July 7 

Lacoste: Get up to 30%-50% off sale items

L.L.Bean: 20% off your purchase, plus up to 60% off sale items through July 4 

M.Gemi: Save up to 65% on select styles for men and women through July 8

Macy's: Save an extra 20% on thousands of items with the code FOURTH

Madewell: 25% off summer must-haves with code FIREWORK through July 8

Manduka: Up to 50% off select mats, towels, and apparel

Mizzen +

M.Gemi: Save up to 65% on shoes and accessories for men and women through July 8

Old Navy: Save up to 60% off everything

Pact Apparel: Save up to 33% sitewide

Paravel: Get $15 off orders of $75, $35 off orders of $150, and $80 off orders of $300

Ralph Lauren: Save an extra 30% on sale styles with code JULY4 through July 5

Reebok: Save 30% on select red, white, and blue items with the code JULY4 at checkout

Rocksbox: Get your first month free through June 9

Ted Baker: Up to 50% off select items for men, women, kids, and home

ThinkGeek: Extra 75% off Clearance items with promo code LIQUIFY 

Timex: Up to 30% off select styles and free shipping

 



Home and kitchen

Artifact Uprising: 10% off sitewide with code 4THOFJULY through July 8

Bellacor: Extra 25% off select lighting and home furnishings + free shipping through July 7

Birch Lane: Take an extra 25% off select items + free shipping with code SEASIDE through July 7

Boll & Branch: 20% off sitewide automatically through July 7

Buffy: $20 off the Buffy Comforter with code FOURTH20

Burrow: Get up to $500 off with the promo code FOURTH19 through July 7

Coddle: Up to 25% off with codeFREEDOM through July 7

Dormify: 20% off sitewide with code SPARKLERS through July 7

Floyd: $150 off select products with the code FLOYDOFJULY until July 7

Home Depot: Save up to 40% on appliances, patio furniture, grills, and tools

Houzz: Up to 80% off items across the site through July 7

Joss and Main: Up to 80% off sitewide through July 5

Minted: Save 15% on wedding and baby+kid orders, save 25% on save the dates with the code FIREWORKS19 through July 8

Modsy: Save 20% off of all Modsy design packages using the promo code HOORAY through July 7

Overstock: Save an extra 20% on select products and get free shipping through July 7

Pier 1 Imports: Up to 50% off all outdoor items

Saatchi Art: Save 15% off originals of $1,500 with the code BLUE15 and 10% off all other originals with the code RED10

Serena & Lily: 20% off sitewide with code GOCOSTAL through July 8

Society6: Save up to 40% off home goods

Target: Up to 30% off patio and home items with the code AMERICA

The Bouqs Co: Save 20% sitewide with the code FIREWORKS20

 

 



Home appliances and home improvements

Best Buy: Up to 40% off appliance Top Deals through July 10

Home Depot: Up to 40% off through July 10

Lowes: Up to 40% off appliance Special Values through July 10

Walmart: Up to 40% off appliances



Tech

Best Buy: Save up to $300 on MacBook Pros, Samsung Galaxy S10+, and more

Dell: Save up to 40% on PCs and electronics and up to 50% on business PCs

HP: Save up to 61% on laptops, desktops, monitors, and accessories

JBL: Save up to 60% on wireless portable speakers, headphones, and more

Lenovo: Save up to $830 on laptops and computer accessories through July 7

 

 

 

 



Outdoor gear

Backcountry: Up to 40% off select styles

Biolite: Up to 35% off select items through July 5

Columbia: 25% off select styles through August 13

Cotopaxi: Up to 50% off select gear and apparel 

Dicks Sporting Goods: Up to 50% off items across the site

Hydro Flask: Save 25% off sitewide through July 4

L.L.Bean: 20% off your purchase with the code JULY4 through July 4

Merrell: 20% off Moab, Encore, Siren styles and apparel

REI: Up to 40% off select items through July 4

The North Face: Up to 30% off select styles 

Timberland: Save an extra 20% on select styles for men and women

 



Beauty and skin care

BeautyCounter: Get a free skin care set when you spend $175 or more through July 5

Birchbox: Save 15% off everything when you spend $35 with the code AMERICA15 through July 5

Sephora: Stock up on select beauty products for $25 and under

The Body Shop: 40% off regular priced items (exclusions apply) through July 5



Miscellaneous

Orgain: 30% off sitewide and a free shaker bottle while supplies last with code JULY4 

Petco: Save up 40% sitewide, save 10% when you buy online and pickup in-store

Udemy: Sign up for thousands of online courses for $10.99 each

 

 



Amazon’s Off-to-College storefront is the ultimate shopping destination for students living on and off campus

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duvet

  • Amazon just launched the Off-to-College storefront, an online destination for all things college that makes shopping easier for parents and students alike.
  • The Off-to-College store has a wide array of products across all kinds of categories, like collegiate apparel, laptops, and pantry essentials. Prime Student members can also get plenty of exclusive deals on Off-to-College products.
  • We checked out the new store and were impressed with the well-curated selection. Get right to shopping or keep reading for 24 of the products we found most useful.

As a (relatively) recent college graduate, I still remember the chaos that was shopping for college. I spent hours scouring Dormify, Bed Bath & Beyond, and West Elm for bedding and cute dorm room decor. I scoped the aisles of The Container Store for desk organizers and storage solutions I could fit under my bed. I visited almost every drugstore in town to stock up on basics like shampoo, conditioner, and tissues. 

Whether it's your first year or last, getting prepared to go off to college can take a lot of effort, and a lot of money. Luckily, Amazon wants to make college prep easier and more affordable for students everywhere. Amazon just launched the Off-to-College store, a convenient destination to shop all things college, from tech and school supplies to dorm decor and apparel. 

The storefront makes it easy to find just what you're looking for, or get some decor inspiration if that's what you need. You can choose to shop by category and jump directly to beddingdesk supplies, or textbooks, or check out the "dorm-inspo" section to find styles curated by lifestyle influencers who are in college, too. Whether your style is modern, casual, or eclectic, this section will provide tons of inspiration to help you design your dream dorm room. You can even see all the products Ava Phillippe (Reese Witherspoon's daughter) counts as her college essentials

A Prime Student membership will get you access to exclusive savings and free one-day or same-day delivery on many items in the Off-to-College store. If you don't have a Prime Student membership, sign up for a six-month free trial. If you like it enough to continue after six months, it will cost you $6.49 a month.

We checked out the storefront and picked out some of the best products across each category. 

If you want to get straight to shopping, head right over to the Off-to-College store. If you want to see our picks, keep reading for 24 great college essentials you'll find at Amazon's new college shop:

Dorm room essentials

The Off-to-College storefront offers ample inspiration to help you dream up your dorm room design. With a wide array of sheets, bedding, and cute pieces of decor, there's plenty of options to make your dorm feel like home. 

Shop dorm room essentials:



Laptops and accessories

You're going to need a good laptop to get all of your assignments done. If you already have one of those, think about the accessories you may need — a laptop case to protect your device, a router if you have to set up your own WiFi, and a hard drive to protect your work just incase your computer crashes are just a few ideas. 

Shop laptops and accessories:



Storage and organization

When it comes to furnishings, most dorm rooms are pretty bare bones. Storage boxes and other organizational tools are great buys — they're an easy way to make use of the space and give all of your things a home. Especially if you have a roommate, you'll want to make sure your space is tidy. Luckily, Amazon has everything from hangers to under-bed storage bins. 

Shop storage and organization:



Tech

Whether it's a TV to binge watch your favorite shows after class or a nice speaker to blast your favorite tunes on a Saturday night, some great tech can transform your dorm room and make life on campus easier for you too. A great pair of headphones for listening to music while studying and walking around campus is a must. Whether you're looking for practical products or fun ones just for entertainment, Amazon has it all. 

Shop tech:



10 cool beauty and skin-care launches only Prime members can get their hands on before Amazon Prime Day

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Prime Day 2019 is set to be the biggest one yet.

On top of the hundreds of thousands of deals, Amazon has also announced a concert headlined by Taylor Swift, an eight-hour live-streamed Twitch marathon full of games and contests, and last but not least, Prime Day Launches. The latter are brand-new products that have launched on Amazon— and are exclusively available to Prime members, like all Prime Day content, for a limited time.

The Prime Day Launches include a host of new products in a variety of categories, including beauty and skin care. From new acne patches from a beloved skin-care brand to vegan highlighters to holographic peel-off masks, you can check out 10 of our favorites below.

Make sure to check out all of our Prime Day 2019 coverage — you'll be able to see everything we've covered so far and keep tabs on all the newest deals as they pop up.

10 of the most noteworthy Prime Day 2019 beauty launches:

No B.S. Acne Patch

No B.S. Acne Patch, $18

Place a No B.S. pimple patch on top of either cystic or hormonal acne and see the sticker rapidly diminish the blemish's severity and size. Thanks to its highly absorbent, non-irritating Hydrocolloid, the sticker can suck up all the gunk underneath the skin and promote rapid healing without disrupting your skin's protective barrier or inviting more germs into an open sore. It's also waterproof. Insider Picks teammates swear by a similar product by Mighty Patch.



Proactiv Amazonian Clay Mask

Proactiv Amazonian Clay Mask, $38

Remember when a $10 clay mask turned the internet upside down? Me too. This time, legendary acne-combating brand Proactiv is releasing their own version to pull impurities right out of your skin like a magnet. 



Freeman Cosmic Holographic Peel-Off Mask

Freeman Cosmic Holographic Peel-Off Mask, Variety 6-Pack, $12.99

If you're the kind of person who loves self-care most when it's outlandish and... possibly iridescent... you're going to love this $13 pack of holographic peel-off masks meant to hydrate and balance the skin. 



Milani Gilded Ember Hyper-Pigmented Face & Eyeshadow Palette

Milani Gilded Ember Hyper-Pigmented Face & Eyeshadow Palette, $19.99

Milani's new hyper-pigmented eyeshadow palette comes with nine eyeshadow shades and two highlighter shades. It's cruelty-free and ranges from soft mattes to metallic shimmers.



Mother Made Charcoal Powder Face Wash

Mother Made Activate Charcoal Purifying Powder Face Wash, $21.49

Designed for sensitive skin, this water-activated powder wash uses charcoal bamboo to draw impurities from the skin and papaya enzymes to exfoliate the skin into a smoother, brighter complexion. 



3INA Lip Oil Balm

3INA Lip Oil Balm, $14

This nourishing lip balm works to repair dry lips with a straightforward, clean mix of natural oils like argan and jojoba. It's vegan, free of parabens, and hasn't been tested on animals. Plus, it comes in six fresh colors.



Thrive Natural Face Moisturizer and Mineral Sunscreen

Thrive Natural Face Moisturizer & Mineral Facial Sunscreen SPF 30

Thrive's new facial sunscreen works to moisturize and repair the skin, while lightweight zinc oxide creates a physical barrier to the sun. Unlike chemical sunscreens, the key ingredients won't be absorbed into your bloodstream — and it should be a better choice for sensitive and acne-prone skin



3INA Makeup Highlighter Glowing Palette

3INA Makeup Highlighter Glowing Palette, $25.50

Another new launch from 3INA is a vegan makeup highlighter palette with four warm, soft shades meant to add depth to the face. Use it for a guilt-free summer glow. 



Marlowe Classic Pomade

Marlowe Classic Pomade, $10.99

Marlowe's classic pomade has been designed for those with short hair looking for a light to medium hold and an easy matte finish. Its new Classic Pomade claims a clean, wax-based list of ingredients and natural extracts that work in tandem to leave hair the perfect amount of tousled, and not wet-looking. 



Pure Apple Cider Vinegar Gummies

Pure Apple Cider Vinegar Gummies, $14.85

If you've ever wanted to bypass the taste of apple cider vinegar but keep the possible health benefits, Pure now makes gummies for exactly that.

 

 



WHERE ARE THEY NOW: First kids of the United States

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U.S. President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, and their son Barron Trump, arrive on the South Lawn of the White House, on March 10, 2019

  • Barron Trump, 13, has lived in the White House for almost two years. It's the first time since John F. Kennedy Jr. that a boy is living at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
  • The first kids of US presidents are in the public eye almost as much as their parents. They dictate fashion trends, appear on their parents' behalf at embassies around the world, and sometimes host senior prom in the White House East Room.
  • But when the first family departs, the spotlight typically turns away from them. We're taking a look at what they've been doing ever since.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.

Some first kids follow their parents into politics, some write about it, or tour the country talking about it, and others do their very best to steer clear of the limelight.

Regardless of what these well known kids end up doing after they move out of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., they're still an important part of United States history.

Here's a look at what the first children are up to these days.

Melissa Stanger and Melia Robinson contributed to previous versions of this article.

SEE ALSO: Trump once reportedly complained the White House is a 'dump.' Photos show how surprisingly small it is.

Caroline Kennedy served as the US ambassador to Japan.

Daughter of John and Jackie Kennedy

Caroline Kennedy served as the US ambassador to Japan for three years. She was the first woman ambassador, and during her tenureformer President Barack Obama strengthened his relationship with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. She resigned from the job shortly after President Donald Trump was sworn in in 2017.

The former attorney, 61, also serves as president of the JFK Presidential Library and has written 10 best-selling books on constitutional law, American history, and poetry.

In 2019, she presented House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award.

Caroline is married to American designer Edwin Schlossberg and they have three children. 



Lynda Bird Johnson Robb advocates for equal rights for women and minorities.

Daughter of Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson

At 75, former Virginia first lady Lynda Bird Johnson Robb is the oldest living child of a US president. In the '70s, she chaired the President's Advisory Committee for Women to help carry out former President Jimmy Carter's mandate to promote gender equality.

Lynda Bird, whose father signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act, spoke at the 50th anniversary ceremony of the March on Washington and attended the remembrance banquet for the 50th anniversary of the "Bloody Sunday" assault in Selma, Alabama.

She has openly supported same-sex marriage, and she and her sister Luci Baines told Katie Couric in an interview in 2014 that she believes her father would have been, too.

In 2019, the Johnson sisters christened a warship bearing their father's name by smashing champagne bottles against the ship.

Lynda Bird has three children with husband Chuck Robb, who was the governor of Virginia from 1982 to 1986 and the state's senator from 1989 to 2001.



Luci Baines (née Johnson) chairs the private holding company her mother founded 70 years ago.

Daughter of Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson

Like mother, like daughter: Luci Baines Johnson and her husband Ian Turpin took the helm of LBJ Asset Management Partners in the late '80s and completely turned the business around during the economic crisis.

In February 2017, Luci Baines attended a gathering in Austin, Texas, to show support for the Muslim community. A marcher who met Luci shared a post about their encounter that went viral.

Now 71, Luci Baines had four children with her first husband, Patrick John Nugent.



Tricia Nixon Cox lives a quiet life with her family in Manhattan.

Daughter of Richard and Pat Nixon

Trisha Nixon Cox, 73, accompanied her father on many campaign stops and state trips during his presidency but has steered clear of the spotlight since starting a family more than 40 years ago.

Trisha serves on the board of the Richard Nixon Foundation and is married to Edward Cox, whom she wed in the first wedding in the White House Rose Garden in 1971. The couple had one child.



Julie Nixon Eisenhower married into another presidential lineage.

Daughter of Richard and Pat Nixon

A staunch supporter of her father after the Watergate scandal, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, 70, lives on a Pennsylvania farm away from the public eye. She married David Eisenhower, President Eisenhower's grandson, uniting two of the country's most powerful political families.

She wrote a biography about her mother, "Pat Nixon: The Untold Story," and also serves on the board of her father's presidential library. She and her husband authored a memoir about her grandfather-in-law, "Going Home to Glory: A Memoir of Life with Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961-1969." The couple had three children.



Michael Ford spent 36 years overseeing campus life at Wake Forest University.

Son of Gerald and Betty Ford

Michael Ford, who went by Mike, returned to his alma mater, Wake Forest University, in 1981 as associate dean of campus life, and retired in 2017 after 36 years.

He married Gayle Ann Brumbaugh in 1974. The couple had three children.



Jack Ford was a founding staff member of the magazine Outside.

Son of Gerald and Betty Ford

John Gardner "Jack" Ford, 67, — once President Ford's "free-spirited, shaggy-haired son" — grew into a successful entrepreneur. He founded a startup, California Infotech, which supplied electronic information kiosks to malls. He also helped launch Outside magazine.

After appearing at half a dozen Republican National Conventions, Jack served as executive director of the San Diego host committee for the RNC in 1996. 

In 1989, he married Juliann Ford. They have two sons.



Steven Ford appeared on seven seasons of "The Young and the Restless."

Son of Gerald and Betty Ford

Wild-child Steven Ford, 63, joined the cast of television soap opera "The Young and The Restless" in 1981, playing P.I. Andy Richards. After six seasons and a role reprisal in 2002, he has since appeared in a number of films, including "Armageddon," "Black Hawk Down," "When Harry Met Sally," and "Transformers."

Ford ended his tenure as chairman of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation in 2014 (though he remains on the board of trustees), but continues to honor the legacy of his father's administration, speaking at town-hall events and lectures around the country. His most requested talks are: "Inside the White House and Hollywood," and "Getting to the top with character."

He never married. 



Susan Ford Bales worked as a photojournalist for high-profile publications.

Daughter of Gerald and Betty Ford

President Ford's only daughter, Susan Ford, took up photography under the mentorship of White House photographer David Kennerly. She went on to become a photojournalist for news outlets, including the Associated Press and Newsweek.

Ford, 61, also launched National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in conjunction with her mother, and succeeded her mother as chairwoman of the Betty Ford Center. She has also been calling for better efforts to identify causes and cures to heart disease, after suffering a sudden cardiac arrest herself in 2013.

She married Charles Vance, one of her father's former secret service agents, and they had two children before divorcing in 1988. She's now married to attorney Vaden Bales.



Jack Carter ran for a Nevada seat in the US Senate.

Son of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter

John William "Jack" Carter ran for the first major office the Carter family has sought since 1980. He sealed the Democratic nomination for a US Senate seat in Nevada, but was unsuccessful against an incumbent Republican senator in the 2006 election.

Jack, 71, spent most of his career in the investment and finance industry. He has been married twice and has two children.



Chip Carter lays low while his son carries on the political torch.

Son of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter

Not much is known about what James Earl "Chip" Carter III, 69, is up to these days. He participated in the Democratic National Committee, served as a member of Plains City Council, and between 1995 and 2004 worked as vice president, then president and CEO, at a not-for-profit that organized international exchanges for adult home stays.

He married three times and has a son and a daughter.

His son — the grandson of President Carter — James Carter IV made headlines during the 2012 presidential election, after he helped unearth the infamous "47%" video that ostracized nominee Mitt Romney. James Carter IV later received a thank-you note from former President Barack Obama.



Jeff Carter launched a computer-electronics company.

Son of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter

Donnel Jeffrey "Jeff" Carter, 67, co-founded Computer Mapping Consultants, a firm that became a consultancy for the World Bank in 1978 and held foreign government contracts.

Jeff married Annette Carter, and they had three children together. In 2018, his 28-year-old son Jeremy died from a suspected heart attack.



Amy Lynn Carter illustrated a children's book that her father wrote.

Daughter of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter

Amy Lynn Carter Wentzel, 51, became a political activist in the '80s and '90s — and was even arrested at a CIA recruitment protest. She later received a master's degree from Tulane in art history and started a family in the Atlanta area with computer consultant James Wentzel. At her wedding ceremony she was not given away, saying she did not belong to anyone. She had one child with Wentzel, before later remarrying and having a second son.

Amy worked with her dad on "The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer," which President Carter wrote and she illustrated. The children's book is about a boy who befriends a monster.



Michael Reagan became a highly successful radio talk-show host.

Son of Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman

Michael Reagan was adopted by the actor-turned-president and his first wife, Jane Wyman, just three years before the couple divorced. He is the last living child of this marriage.

After a stint working in aerospace, the powerboat-racing enthusiast found his niche as a political radio talk-show host. He hosted the show for over 26 years. In his retirement, Michael writes op-ed articles, contributes to Newsmax Media, and serves as president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation.

Michael, 74, has been married twice, and has two children.

 



Patti Davis is the author of multiple fiction and nonfiction novels.

Daughter of Ronald and Nancy Reagan

The first child of Ronald Reagan's marriage to Nancy, Patti Davis, 66, overcame a number of personal obstacles, including drug addiction, self-harm, and an eating disorder, and discovered her voice through her writing. She has published more than half a dozen works.

She blogs regularly on her website and in 2017, her editorial on her father's shooter went viral. In 2019, she said her father would be "horrified" about democracy during the era of President Donald Trump.

Patti married Paul Grilley in 1984. They divorced in 1990 and had no children.



Ron Reagan provides political analysis as an MSNBC contributor.

Son of Ronald and Nancy Reagan

Ron Reagan, 61, tried his hand at a number of careers, including ballet dancing, before arriving in journalism and joining MSNBC as a political analysis contributor. He has expressed strong opposition to Trump.

Ron only ever knew his father as a politician, but unlike his father has very liberal political views. The "unabashed atheist" recorded a comical PSA for the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which ran during Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" and "The Colbert Report" in 2014.

He married Doria Palmieri, a clinical psychologist, in 1980. She died in 2014.



George W. Bush served as president from 2001 to 2009.

Son of George H.W. and Barbara Bush

George W. Bush served as the 43rd president at the start of the war in Iraq.

The eldest son of President George H.W. Bush, he was criticized for his handling of the "War on Terror," Hurricane Katrina, and other challenges. Since his presidency, he has avoided the political limelight and grown more liked.

In 2019, he called for the end of the partial government shutdown on Instagram, with a photo featuring him and his wife Laura Bush handing pizza over to their Secret Service detail, who were working without pay.

Today the 72-year-old is enjoying retirement as a grandpa and an artist. He has two daughters and will welcome in a third grandchild in 2019.



John E. "Jeb" Bush is a non-resident professor at the University of Pennsylvania.

Son of George H.W. and Barbara Bush

Jeb Bush carved himself a place in politics as the former governor of Florida, along with an unsuccessful run for the White House in 2015.

The Florida resident transitioned from corporate life to public office in the '80s — first as the chairman of the Dade County Republican Party and then as the governor of the Sunshine State. During his presidential campaign, he released 33 years of tax returns— the most ever made public by a presidential candidate — as a sign to voters that he values transparency.

Since his presidential run, the 66-year-old has been spending time teaching, first as a visiting fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, then teaching a class at at Texas A&M before being named presidential professor of practice at the University of Pennsylvania.

In 1974, he married Columba Garnica Gallo and they have three children.



Neil Bush is a director of the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M.

Son of George H. W. and Barbara Bush

Neil Bush works as a director of Texas A&M's Bush School of Government and Public Service and as chair of the board of directors at Points of Light, the philanthropic group his father founded.

A businessman and active philanthropist, Bush, 64, also founded educational software company Ignite! Learning in 1999 after struggling with dyslexia as a child.

Neil married Sharon Bush and they had three children. In 2003, they divorced and he married Maria Andrews in 2004.



Marvin Bush is a managing partner at an investment firm in Washington, D.C.

Son of George H. W. and Barbara Bush

At 62, Marvin Bush is 41's youngest son. He's the cofounder and managing partner at Washington, D.C.-based investment firm Winston Partners.

Marvin made headlines during the 2016 presidential election when he endorsed Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson over Trump, following his brother Jeb's exit from the race.

He married Margaret Conway in 1981 and they adopted two children.



Dorothy Bush Koch authored a book about her experience as a first kid.

Daughter of George H.W. and Barbara Bush

Dorothy Bush Koch, who goes by "Doro," is the former president's youngest child and only living daughter. She is involved in a number of charities and philanthropies, and serves as the honorary co-chair of The Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.

Doro, 59, is the author of "My Father, My President: A Personal Account of the Life of George H. W. Bush," a memoir of her life as the 41st president's daughter. She also helped found a wellness company that educates people about mindfulness and holistic living.

She and her husband Robert P. Koch live in Maryland, and have four children. Two of the kids are from her first marriage with William Heekin LeBlond.



Chelsea Clinton serves as vice chair of the Clinton Foundation.

Daughter of Bill and Hillary Clinton

While her mother Hillary lost the presidency to Trump, Chelsea, 39, said a future for her in politics was a "definite maybe". She's currently vice chair of the Clinton Foundation, where she champions the group's advocacy work in global health and childhood obesity. The Stanford grad previously worked as a special correspondent for NBC News.

Chelsea has written five children's books, and she's active on Twitter discussing issues facing families, public health, and dealing with bullies. In 2019, her and husband Marc Mezvinsky announced they were expecting their third baby, a sibling to daughter Charlotte and son Aiden.



Barbara Pierce Bush is the CEO of an international healthcare equality nonprofit.

Daughter of George W. and Laura Bush

Within five years of graduating from Yale, Barbara Pierce Bush cofounded Global Health Corps, a nonprofit that recruits young professionals to fight for better access to healthcare around the world. Before that she worked at a children's hospital in South Africa and interned for UNICEF in Botswana.

She was a noted Hillary Clinton supporter during the 2016 election. In 2017, she and her sister Jenna Hager Bush released a book they wrote called "Sisters First" about growing up in a political dynasty.

In 2018, Barbara married screenwriter Craig Coyne at the Bush family's Walker Point compound in Maine.



Jenna Bush Hager is a host for NBC's "Today" show.

Daughter of George W. and Laura Bush

The younger of the Bushes' twin daughters, Jenna Bush Hager was announced as the new host for the 10 o'clock hour of the "Today" show in 2019. At the same time, she and her husband Henry announced they were expecting their third child.

Since taking over "Today" she has begun a monthly book club that's been so successful it prompted Entertainment Weekly to dub her the new "book club queen". She also serves as a board member on the Greenwich International Film Festival.

 



Malia Obama is studying at Harvard, just like her dad.

Daughter of Barack and Michelle Obama

Malia Obama is studying at Harvard University. She departed the White House in 2016 as a fashion icon and still makes headlines for her chic style.

In 2014, she interned on canceled CBS series "Extant," and in 2015, she spent the summer interning on Lena Dunham's HBO series "Girls." After finishing high school at Sidwell Friends School she took a gap year, where she interned at major film studio The Weinstein Company.

Malia turns 21 on the Fourth of July.



Sasha Obama just turned 18.

Daughter of Barack and Michelle Obama

Sasha has graduated from high school, and is reportedly heading to the University of Michigan. Before that though, she and the rest of the family flew to the South of France for a family vacation.

In 2016 she learned all about earning money, working in the takeout window at Nancy's, a seafood restaurant on Martha's Vineyard, with six secret service agents in tow. Her and her sister's reaction to meeting "Deadpool" star Ryan Reynolds also went viral in 2016.



Donald Trump Jr. likes to hunt, fish, and run the Trump Organization.

Donald Trump Jr., 41, has done his father proud rising to be executive vice president for the Trump organization, focusing on expanding the commercial and real estate side of the business, as well as previously appearing on "The Apprentice".

He played a key role in his father's election campaign, making $50,000 speeches on his behalf. He's also been criticized for the way he uses social media. And DJTJ famously met with a Russian lawyer at Trump Tower in June 2016 to get "dirt" on Clinton.

Donald Jr. likes to spend his weekends hunting and fishing or in the Catskills with his five children. He and his ex-wife Vanessa finalized their divorce in February, and he's been dating former Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle since spring 2018. He and Guilfoyle are on the campaign rounds for Trump's reelection.



Ivanka Trump is an official advisor for the President.

Ivanka Trump, 37, considered the president's favorite child, has been an adviser to her father since early 2017. In 2018 she was criticized for using a personal account to send hundreds of government related emails.

Before that she worked at the Trump Organization with her brothers, but resigned to avoid any conflicts of interest. She also had her own Ivanka Trump fashion brand, which she shut down in July 2018.

In her early life she modeled for brands like Tommy Hilfiger and Versace. She later appeared on "The Apprentice" as well as appearing on an episode of "Gossip Girl".

She is married to real estate developer Jared Kushner, who also works with her at the White House. They have three young children.



Eric Trump started a charitable foundation.

Eric Trump, 35, like his older brother Donald Jr., is an executive vice president at the family business, has appeared on "The Apprentice", and also enjoys hunting. He has been criticized for hunting animals in Zimbabwe.

In 2007, Eric created a charitable foundation to raise money for St Jude Children's Research hospital in Tennessee, but later stopped fundraising to avoid confusion around donations in the wake of his father's run to be president. In 2017, the foundation came under fire when a Forbes report alleged that thousands in donations were funneled to the Trump Organization.

In 2014, he married Lara Lea Yunaska. They're expecting their second child.



Tiffany Trump is studying law in Washington.

Tiffany Trump, 25, is the only daughter from the president's second marriage to television personality Marla Maples. She studies law at Georgetown University after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in 2016.

When she was 14 she released a single called "Like A Bird" , and said she was considering becoming a professional singer on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." She was later profiled as one of the "Rich Kids of Instagram" and has 1 million followers on the social network.



Barron Trump brought his class to meet his dad at the White House on a field trip.

Son of Melania and Donald Trump

Barron Trump, 13, relocated to the White House after living at Trump Tower in Manhattan when his dad took office to finish out the school year. He is the first boy to live in the White House since John F. Kennedy Jr.

Barron is attending St. Andrew's Episcopal School in Maryland, where tuition costs about $40,000 a year.

In May 2017, he took his classmates to meet his dad at the White House.



I left this $300 charcoal grill out in the wind, rain, sleet, snow, and salt for a year — here's how it has held up

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  • Charcoal grills tend to be cheap, flimsy things we plan to throw away when their time comes, which, sadly, is an average of about two to five years. 
  • Even sadder, even the cheapest ones aren't all that cheap.
  • The IG Charcoal Grill is under $500 — at the time of publishing it's under $300— stainless steel, and all-weather-proof.
  • It'll far outlast any grill at its price, and handle almost any backyard barbecue you might throw at it (it'll hold 15 to 20 burgers at a time), and it's also among our favorite charcoal grills in our complete buying guide.

Every once in a while an exceptional new innovation in the grilling world comes along. This is not that innovation. Instead, the IG Charcoal Grill is a simplistic but sturdy take on a simple, age-old design that, sadly, not a lot of grill manufacturers strive toward these days.

I'm not naming names, but it's been a long time since I've owned a grill that didn't immediately show signs of wear and tear, let alone last a full year (four seasons in the temperate Northeast of the United States) out in the open, pelted with everything from wind (upwards of 60 mph), rain, hail, snow, salt (it lives less than 100 yards from the sea), and merciless summer sunlight. Here's the real shocker, though: It has no cover.

Yep, this grill has been out in the elements through winter, spring, summer, and fall, and I've put it through everything I could possibly think of, save for a two-story drop test, which is a ridiculous thing to put a grill through in the first place. (However, if you disagree, I'm open to talking.)

And while grills can be notoriously difficult and laborious to assemble, this one was pretty straightforward; even this fumbling reporter had it up and running, coals aflare, in under an hour.

Let's talk specs for the IG Charcoal Grill

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First of all, at 18 inches (dimensions: 61.5" x 18" x 36.5"), this is a very large grill, but don't let it intimidate you. You don't have to fill it with charcoal, and I actually find that the extra space to move it into and out of the heat can make cooking just about anything far less hectic. If I'm not cooking for, say, a party of eight to 10 (which in my case is rare), then I'll pile my coals on one side and leave the other to warm or slow-cook, if I'm slow-cooking anything.

There's really everything you need here. The side tables are great for prepped food, further prepping, and even mise en place, and the shelf below can handle all your grilling tools while keeping them out of the way. The stainless steel grill grate (which breaks in two) is large, wide, and easy to handle (thanks to two raised synthetic-but-heat-proof-coated wooden handles), which allows you access into the charcoal bed while cooking, should you need to reload or, heaven forbid, recover anything of importance.

The commercial-grade wheels (everything is commercial grade on this grill) also lock in place, naturally (but it's still worth pointing out), so you don't have to worry about your grill rolling away (just make sure you lock them).

The best thing about this grill might be that it's so easy to assemble. It also comes with rudimentary hardware, which means that, should anything break or pop off, you'll be able to fix it with a quick trip to the hardware store, if worst comes to worst. And yes, it does come with a reasonable one-year warranty, under which replacement parts are covered, as are shipping and handling charges.

How to adjust the IG Charcoal Grill's heat

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The rotating handle, which allows you to raise and lower the coal bed as needed, makes temperature control a cinch. It doesn't require all that much explanation, but just think of all the times you've overcooked your dinner because your charcoal grill was too hot. This solves it. It's also, dare I say, kind of fun.

Check out the grill's sliding ash-catching tray

iggrill

All too often, charcoal grills get choked out by ash, and once you've got a fire lit, there's not too much you can do. This tray is nothing revolutionary, but it's something you won't find in most consumer-grade charcoal grills — which, frankly, this is not. You'd be forgiven for letting the price fool you, though.

Here's the grill in action

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Okay, so things might have gotten a little too hot (see slight charring above) at one point, but do you see how well it corrected? Thank you, magically adjustable charcoal bed.

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We didn't have a lot to cook — maybe two pounds of pork — but the IG Charcoal Grill was still our favored grill of choice this night. (For the record, we have three grills to choose from here, and all of which are charcoal.)

We easily could have used the smallest grill on the patio, which would have barely fit these two boneless country ribs, but we wouldn't have had nearly as much room to move them around or adjust the coal bed level and find the sweet spot with the heat. And, remember, just because you're using this large grill does not mean you have to fill it with charcoal (or food). No dish or fire is too small.

The bottom line

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I'll be blunt here, because it feels appropriate, and because this is my time and your time at stake, and I would be beyond remiss to waste it: If it's time for you to look for a new charcoal grill, look no further. Buy this grill. I mean it. It is among my most beloved cooking contraptions, and I can't imagine going back to life without it. It can handle everything, but it is still worth lighting up for relatively nothing (see photo above). The elements do not seem to penetrate it, it's user-friendly, and, hey, it doesn't look all that bad, either...

This grill is a brute, and plain and simply put: It just works.

Pros: Fairly priced, large, (basically) mobile, adjustable coal bed, one-year warranty (replacement parts and shipping included)

Cons: No cover included (but a brand representative assures me they're coming)

Buy the IG Charcoal BBQ 18" Barrel Charcoal Grill from Wayfair for $289.99 (free shipping)

SEE ALSO: Hydro Flask water bottles are lightweight, nearly indestructible, and just downright fun

Join the conversation about this story »


Gas and diesel prices rose at the worst possible time for drivers in the US and these states are being affected most

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A man gets gasoline at a BP station in St. Louis, Missouri January 14, 2015, as gas prices dropped across the country over the last three months.   REUTERS/Kate Munsch

  • Gas and diesel taxes went up in a handful of US states on July 1.
  • Those increases are happening in California, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Vermont.
  • There are various reasons for the hikes, depending on the state, but they are primarily meant to help fund maintenance and improvements for roads, bridges and other infrastructure around the country.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Gas and diesel taxes have risen in 12 states, most prominently in Illinois, Ohio, and California.

Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Vermont have also implemented hikes. There are various reasons for the increases, depending on the state, but they are primarily meant to help fund maintenance and improvements for roads, bridges and other transportation infrastructure around the country.

For some states, the gas tax increase has been long delayed. Some states have postponed this increase for several years due to the political challenges, Carl Davis, a research director at the Institute of Taxation and Economic Policy, told Business Insider. Davis is an expert in transportation infrastructure funding.

"Lawmakers don't want to take a vote to raise the price of gas, but at the same time, drivers don't want to drive over an unsafe bridge or hit a pothole or be stuck in a traffic congestion," Davis said. "There are inevitable tradeoffs here, and navigating these tradeoffs can be tricky."

These are the states that have increased their gas tax rates:

California

California's gas tax increased by 5.6 cents per gallon to a total of 47.3 cents per gallon. This was the final increase from a 2017 bill that was created to help pay for infrastructure improvements. The gas tax rate will now be adjusted for inflation on an annual basis.



Connecticut

The tax rate on diesel fuel jumped 2.6 cents, bringing it to a total of 46.5 cents per gallon. This is still lower than the state's 2013 peak of 54.9 cents.



Illinois

The gas tax in Connecticut is up 19 cents, doubling the previous tax for a total of 38 cents per gallon. The diesel tax increased by 24 cents to nearly 46 cents per gallon.



Indiana

Gas taxes in the Hoosier State increased 0.5 cents per gallon, and diesel will increase by a penny per gallon.

According to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, in Indiana, both of these taxes "are updated annually to keep pace with inflation and the rate of personal income growth in Indiana."



Maryland

Gas and diesel taxes increased 1.4 cents to a total of 36.7 cents per gallon. The change is due to a 2013 formula which increases the tax rate in accordance with inflation and fuel prices.



Michigan

The taxes increased by 0.1 cents for gas and 0.2 cents for diesel. The tax rates differ each month, depending on the price of fuel.



Montana

Gas taxes rose by 0.5 cents, while diesel rose by 0.2 cents. Both increases are the result of 2017 legislation that will spur incremental gas tax hikes through July 2022.



Nebraska

Tax rates for both gas and diesel rose by 0.1 cents.



Ohio

Gas taxes rose by 10.5 cents per gallon in Ohio, while diesel rose by 19 cents to a total of 47 cents per gallon.



Rhode Island

Drivers in Rhode Island got a one-cent tax increase on gas and diesel in the state, for a total tax of 34 cents per gallon. It's the first gas-tax hike since July 2015, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy said.



South Carolina

Taxes on gas and diesel rose by two cents per gallon on July 1. The increase is the third installment of a six-part series of tax hikes implemented in 2017.



Tennessee

The gas tax rose by one cent on July 1, while diesel rose by three cents.



Vermont

The gas tax in Vermont increased by 0.55 cents. The tax rate on diesel is unchanged.



Amazon sells a $19,000 do-it-yourself tiny-home kit that takes only 2 days to build — here's what it looks like inside (AMZN)

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Amazon prides itself on being the go-to easy-to-use online marketplace for everything you need — and that apparently includes tiny houses.

Tiny homes have become increasingly popular in the past few years, whether that's because of rising costs of living or because they encourage minimalist living. Tiny homes make it possible to own your own property, even if that house measures only between 100 and 400 square feet.

But while constructing a functional housing unit may seem like a daunting task, Amazon has stepped in to make a hot millennial trend available to the masses by making these tiny homes easy to buy and simple to build. There are more than two dozen options on Amazon for DIY tiny-home kits, including 113-foot cabins at $5,350 and loft-bedroom houses at $20,000.

Surprisingly, some of the Amazon listingssay these tiny homes can be built in as little as two days with two people.

To get an idea of how buying a tiny house on Amazon works, take a look at this "getaway cabin" being sold on Amazon for nearly $19,000:

SEE ALSO: How to use TikTok, the short-form video app Gen Z loves and that's ushering in a new era of influencers

This is one of the tiny homes for sale on Amazon — a build-it-yourself kit for a "getaway cabin."

The company selling this tiny-house kit on Amazon is a United Kingdom-based company called Lillevilla, which manufactures log cabins. The tiny-home kits on Amazon are mainly sold by Lillevilla and the wood-production e-retailer Allwood Outlet.



The all-wood home is advertised as a cabin and not a full-fledged residence, likely because the tiny home comes with only bare materials and few features.

The tiny home is "large enough to function as a summer house, granny flat, home office or even a stand-alone retail building," the description says



The floor map for the tiny home shows a little bit more about its specifications. The setup is simple: three rooms on the main floor spanning 292 square feet and an attic-level loft bedroom above.

The home also includes a partially covered deck out front, which is optional if you're not feeling the outdoor wooden floor.



To make best use of the small property, and to make the home easy to build, amenities are sparse. Without gas, it'd be hard to set up a kitchen. To make up for the lack of electricity, each room in the tiny home has at least one window for natural lighting.

To turn the cabin into a "primary residence," Allwood suggests adding utility hookups for electricity and internet, and insulation for colder temperatures. 



Behind the tiny home's French doors, here's what the main 16-foot-wide area looks like.

The room is split up, however, by the ladder in the center that leads up to the small loft room above.



The loft area is where Allwood advertises that the bedroom would be. The slanted roof makes hitting your head a strong possibility — at its tallest height, the room measures less than 5 feet tall.



The Allwood listing for the tiny home shows that the building comes in three big parcels when it's shipped to you. All the materials needed for constructing the tiny home apparently come in the shipped package: roof shingles and gables, glass panes, nails and screws, and the lock for the door.

Allwood says only "minimal tools are needed." For the interested buyer who has minimal building experience, the package is accompanied with "easy to use" instructions that should be simple to follow.



However, it is possible you'll need outside expertise for building the tiny home. The tiny-home kit comes with floorboards but not with materials for building a foundation that ensures the home is secure and stable.

Adding a foundation made of gravel or concrete can help give a house a stable base, especially if you're trying to build a tiny house on grass (that can soften in the rain) or on ground that's not flat.



This particular tiny home kit goes for $18,800 on Amazon. The listing suggests that building the cabin can take as little as two days with two people working.

Fortunately, shipping on this home is free.



But Amazon also sells other tiny homes of varying sizes and designs, too. On the cheaper side, this one-room 113-square-foot cabin goes for $5,350.

Lillevilla also suggests not using this as a tiny home, but instead as a "home office, lake house, guest cottage, yoga studio, retail kiosk, or simply a retreat in your back yard."



On the pricier side, Amazon sells this Timberline cabin. For $34,900, this home is 354 square feet and more customizable, which makes changing the home's floor plan much easier

Amazon sells other build-it-yourself home kits for $46,900 and $64,650. However, these houses are much bigger than the 400-square-foot maximum under the definition of a "tiny house."



The founders of a cult shoe brand say men and women both make the same key fashion mistake

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Baudoin & Lange men walking

  • The founders of Baudoin & Lange have some pretty strong thoughts on good (and bad) fashion.
  • Bo van Langeveld was working in investment banking when he realized senior men in the company were wearing well-tailored suits with no shoes, or simply bad shoes.
  • At the same time, ex-Apple employee Allan Boudin was learning the art of bespoke shoemaking.
  • The pair, who met in 2016 to start cult loafer brand Baudoin & Lange, told Business Insider the biggest style mistakes both men and women make.
  • According to Baudoin, the worst thing you can do is overdress.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Bo van Langeveld realized while working as an investment banker in a private equity firm in London that the finance world had a major fashion problem.

"I noticed that men in corporate senior positions all take off their shoes after traditional office hours," he told Business Insider. "I remember the exact moment, when I saw one of the senior men in the company wearing an extremely well-tailored suit, only for it to be totally undermined by his lack of shoes and some rather garishly coloured socks."

Van Langeveld, who had formerly been a racecar driver in the Netherlands until an accident halted his career, added that he was also "rather surprised by the commuter ensemble of trainers and suits, which is often seen in the world of finance."

"It dawned on me that if your dress shoes are so uncomfortable that you resort to pairing your smart suit with a pair of worn running shoes, then it's time to invest in some new footwear," he said.

Read more:Ryan Reynolds' latest suit is his best yet, and one detail proves his style is head and shoulders above the rest

At the same time, Parisian Allan Baudoin had left a career at Apple in London, having become "disillusioned" with the company after the passing of CEO Steve Jobs.

"Growing up in Paris, I always had an instinct for upcoming trends from a young age, as I spent my childhood surrounded by art and immersed in 'rive-gauche' aesthetics," he told Business Insider.

After Apple, he said he "went in search of a radical change and a serendipitous encounter with a retired shoemaker, Kasim, resulted in an immediate friendship with a mutual appreciation for craftsmanship."

"Kasim taught me the ins and outs of bespoke shoemaking and I embarked upon the journey of an artisan," he said. "I travelled from Istanbul to Florence and Paris to meet with makers and buyers while learning the trade and honing my craft along the way.

"It was during one visit to an exceptional artisan in Istanbul that I began to view my artisanal craft under a business lens, designing a product that looked and felt remarkable, with a potential to scale and become a brand name."

That product was an unlined slip-on shoe inspired by Belgian loafers, which was "once popular with art gallerists and socialites in 1950s New York," he said. He named it the Sagan, in honour of the late astrophysicist Carl Sagan.

"It was then in 2016 that I met Bo, and we started Baudoin & Lange," he said.

allan and bo

Together, the pair have since opened an extremely stylish atelier in a former shoe factory building in east London, and have given the "Sagan" shoe somewhat of a cult status.

It's safe to say they both know how to style a shoe — but they have some other thoughts on good (and bad) fashion as well.

Overdressing is the worst thing you can do

Baudoin told Business Insider that the worst style mistake both men and women make is overdressing.

"I would advise men to always approach how they dress for the day or the evening by thinking who they will encounter on their outing, in which environment, and how these people will likely be dressed," he said.

"For example, at a wedding, the classic rule is for the groom to always be the most formally dressed (morning suit or tuxedo) so that no guests should feel ashamed if they were to come overdressed. This explains that."

Read more:Two photographers told us what a day at London Fashion Week is really like behind the scenes, and it was pretty eye-opening

For women, he added: "Many women wonder what makes Parisian chic what it is.

"It is often about embellishing details in a subtle and natural manner and playing with the limits of nonchalance. Most real Parisians only wear high heels to very formal events, hence the popularity of ballerinas and loafers there."

Don't pair an expensive suit with bad shoes

briefcase

Meanwhile, van Langeveld's biggest bug bear is, of course, bad shoes in the workplace.

"Many people often disregard the need for a smart pair of comfortable, yet stylish shoes," he said. "It isn't uncommon to see men with expensive suits, which are instantly ruined by a scuffed pair of unpolished dress shoes.

"It can be difficult to strike the correct balance between style and comfort, something that looks good and feels good, and is therefore overlooked by many men and women."

Oh, and one more thing — "Men should always invest in a proper briefcase, as opposed to a backpack," according to van Langeveld.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Mount Everest is not the hardest mountain to climb — here's what makes K2 so much worse

The 25 US cities where rent is increasing the fastest, ranked

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  • Rents across America continue to rise.
  • As of July 2019, the national median rent for a one-bedroom apartment is $1,220, according to a report by Zumper.
  • Business Insider teamed up with Zillow to take a look at the top 25 cities out of the 100 largest US cities where one-bedroom rents are increasing at the fastest rate.
  • Over 50% of the states listed are located in the southern or western parts of the US.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Median rents for one-bedroom apartments across the country continue to soar. 

The national median price for a one-bedroom apartment was $1,220 as of July 2019. That's a .8% year-to-date increase.

But just how much is rent going up? We teamed up with Zillow to find the top 25 cities out of the 100 largest US cities where one-bedroom rents are increasing at the fastest rate. What we found was that most of those cities aren't our usual big-city contenders — and that over 50% of the states listed are located in the southern or western parts of the country.

Read more: The salary you need to afford rent in every state, ranked

Zillow's data echoes moving and relocation trends within America. Business Insider's Andy Kiersz reported that, according to a 2019 report from the US Census Bureau, counties in the South and West had more people move in than move out in 2018.

Zillow's data represents the increase of median one-bedroom rent prices from May 2018 to May 2019. Zillow noted that multiple factors affect the cities' median prices, including the development of new apartments or the rapid listing of multiple luxury apartments in a short period of time.

Keep reading to see the 25 cities where the median rent is increasing the fastest, ranked from the lowest to the highest rate of increase. Business Insider obtained the estimated population of each city from World Population Review

SEE ALSO: Here's how much it costs to rent a one-bedroom apartment in 15 major US cities

DON'T MISS: Here's how much money you need to have saved if you want to get married and buy a home in the same year in 25 cities

Lexington: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Lexington, Kentucky increased by 7.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Lexington, Kentucky is $820, up $59 from last year's median of $761.

The city's estimated population is 323,780.



Orlando: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Orlando, Florida increased by 8.4%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Orlando, Florida is $1,339, up $104 from last year's median of $1,235.

The city's estimated population is 285,713.



Tucson: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Tucson, Arizona increased by 8.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Tucson, Arizona is $680, up $55 from last year's median of $625.

Tucson is about an hour and 40 minutes away from Phoenix. The city's estimated population is 545,975.



Mesa: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Mesa, Arizona increased by 9.5%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Mesa, Arizona is $989, up $85 from last year's median of $904.

Mesa is about 25 minutes away from Phoenix by car. The city's estimated population is 508,958.



New Orleans: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in New Orleans, Louisiana increased by 9.9%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in New Orleans, Louisiana is $1,404, up $126 from last year's median of $1,278.

The city's estimated population is 391,006.



Boise: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Boise, Idaho increased by 9.9%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Boise, Idaho is $1,065, up $96 from last year's median of $969.

The city's estimated population is 228,790.



Fort Worth: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fort Worth, Texas increased by 10.2%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fort Worth, Texas is $1,344, up $124 from last year's median of $1,220.

Fort Worth is about 40 minutes away from Dallas by car. The city's estimated population is 895,008.



Indianapolis: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Indianapolis, Indiana increased by 10.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Indianapolis, Indiana is $859, up $84 from last year's median of $775.

The city's estimated population is 867,125.



Marietta: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Marietta, Georgia increased by 11.6%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Marietta, Georgia is $1,079, up $112 from last year's median of $967.

Marietta is about 45 minutes away from Atlanta by car. The city's estimated population is 61,048.



Durham: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Durham, North Carolina increased by 11.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Durham, North Carolina is $1,162, up $123 from last year's median of $1,039. 

Durham is about 40 minutes away from Raleigh by car. The city's estimated population is 469,298.



Los Angeles: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, California increased by 11.9%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, California is $2,362, up $252 from last year's median of $2,110.

The city's estimated population is 3,990,456.



Austin: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Austin, Texas increased by 12.2%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Austin, Texas is $1,352, up $146 from last year's median of $1,206.

The city's estimated population is 964,254.



Oklahoma City: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma increased by 13.6%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma is $795, up $95 from last year's median of $700.

The city's estimated population is 649,021.



Chandler: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Chandler, Arizona increased by 15%.

As of May 2019, the median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Chandler, Arizona is $1,227, up $160 from last year's median of $1,067.

Chandler is about 30 minutes away from Phoenix by car. The city's estimated population is 257,165.



Riverside: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Riverside, California increased by 15%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Riverside, California is $1,560, up $204 from last year's median of $1,356.

Riverside is about an hour and 30 minutes away from Los Angeles by car. The city's estimated population is 330,063.



El Paso: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in El Paso, Texas increased by 15.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in El Paso, Texas is $689, up $94 from last year's median of $595.

El Paso is located in the southwestern corner of Texas, about eight hours away from Austin by car. The city's estimated population is 682,669.



Tulsa: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Tulsa, Oklahoma increased by 16.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Tulsa, Oklahoma is $695, up $100 from last year's median of $595.

Tulsa is about an hour and a half away from Oklahoma City by car. The city's estimated population is 400,669.



Scottsdale: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Scottsdale, Arizona increased by 18.4%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Scottsdale, Arizona is $1,450, up $225 from last year's median of $1,225.

Scottsdale is about 25 minutes away from Phoenix by car. The city's estimated population is 255,310.



Phoenix: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Phoenix, Arizona increased by 19.5%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Phoenix, Arizona is $1,171, up $191 from last year's median of $980.

The city's estimated population is 1,660,272.



Stockton: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Stockton, California increased by 22.2%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Stockton, California is $1,097, up $199 from last year's median of $898.

Stockton is about an hour away from Sacramento by car. The city's estimated population is 311,178.



Newark: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Newark, New Jersey increased by 28.6%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Newark, New Jersey is $1,350 up $300 from last year's median of $1,050.

The city's estimated population is 282,090.



Mobile: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Mobile, Alabama increased by 29.4%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Mobile, Alabama is $760, up $172 from last year's median of $588.

Mobile is about two hours and 30 minutes away from Montgomery by car. The city's estimated population is 189,572.



Fresno: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fresno, California increased by 30.6%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fresno, California is $908, up $213 from last year's median of $695.

Fresno is about three hours away from Sacramento by car. The city's estimated population is 530,093.



Oakland: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Oakland, California increased by 34.6%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Oakland, California is $3,063, up $788 from last year's median of $2,275.

The city's estimated population is 429,082.



Fort Wayne: The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fort Wayne, Indiana increased by 38.8%.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Fort Wayne, Indiana is $694, up $194 from last year's median of $500.

Fort Wayne is about two hours away from Indianapolis by car. The city's estimated population is 267,633.



We pitted a $33,000 turbo Ford Mustang against a $38,000 turbo Chevy Camaro to see which was the better budget sports car — and the winner was clear (GM, F)

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Mustang Turbo Convertible


Ford and Chevy have for decades been locked in a battle for muscle-car supremacy.

The Mustang arrived in 1965, the Camaro in '67. The fight hasn't let up since.

Both automakers offer big, powerful versions of their flagship muscle cars. But they also know that not everybody wants a massive V8 engine, which is what makes a muscle car a muscle car. So they offer less stonking versions of the 'Stang and the mullet mobile, each with a turbocharged powerplant.

OK, they aren't really true muscle cars — they're more like mini muscles. But they're lots of fun, and given advancements in technology, they're not at all underpowered or unimpressive, even if they ultimately aren't as rewarding as proper muscle cars.

We tried the turbo Camaro a few years ago. Last year, we jumped behind the wheel of the turbo Mustang. Here's how it all went down.

FOLLOW US: On Facebook for more car and transportation content!

First up is the Camaro.



The Camaro was Chevy's 1960s response to the Mustang. Here's a rude 1968 model.



Danielle Muoio, a former transportation reporter for Business Insider, checked out the turbo Camaro in 2017.

Read the review »



We're up to the sixth generation of the muscle car. The 2009 redesign radically reimagined the early-2000s ride, dropping a sleek chassis in favor of a burly, aggressive coupé that a lot of people first saw as Bumblebee from "Transformers."



The fastback design is very Camaro.



The fascia is borderline hostile.

Our test car had a 275-horsepower, 2.0-liter, four-cylinder turbocharged engine.

Muoio wrote in her review: "That's an immediate dealbreaker for most who want actual muscle in their muscle car — say, the bonkers 650hp supercharged V8 in the Camaro ZL1. In fact, there are some folks who wouldn't look twice at the available 3.6-liter V6, which makes a mere 335hp."



That famous gold bowtie badge is remarkably subdued on the front grille.

The Camaro starts at $30,405, but options like the eight-speed automatic transmission (yes, this Camaro can be had stock with a six-speed manual) and additional safety tech bumped the price to $38,130.

We had the LT with the $1,950 RS package, so we at least got our hands on the sportier four-cylinder.



Turbo-haters can always move up to the 455-horsepower Camaro SS, shown here with the refreshed 2019 look ...

 

 



... or shoot the moon with the 650-horsepower Camaro ZL1, whose output is in Corvette Z06 territory.



Camaros can also be had as drop-tops.



Speaking of drop-tops, let's now turn our attention to the Mustang EcoBoost turbo, which I tested in convertible trim.

Our 2018 test car was priced at about $33,000 and packed a 2.3-liter, four-cylinder EcoBoost turbocharged motor, making 310 horsepower with 350 pound-feet of torque, piped through a 10-speed automatic to the rear wheels.

That's a decent bump over the Camaro's four-banger, and definitely a notch in the 'Stang's favor.



The Mustang has a longer history than the Camaro, but not by much. Here's an original vintage 'Stang parked next to a 2018 model. The 'Stang arrived in 1965, and Chevy followed with a sporty coupé in 1967.



In the battle of the drop-tops, I think the Mustang has always been the victor. If you match coupé to coupé, it's a closer race.



Here's the 'Stang with the top raised. The simple automated mechanism can provide open-air motoring in about 10 seconds.



The Mustang family was refreshed for 2018, after the previous generation rolled out in 2015. The front end, just to highlight one feature, shed some snoutiness and became sleeker and smoother.



So what about that 10-speed auto versus the eight-speed in the Camaro? The Mustang's is better.

You can paddle-shift both cars in manual mode — but while I liked doing that in the Camaro, I enjoyed the slick-shifting Mustang's auto so much that I barely paddled the pony car at all.



The Mustang's EcoBoost four is a sad sight for anybody who craves a V8 under the hood of their muscle car. But it's quite simply a superior engine to the Camaro's smaller turbo.



There's no longer a six-cylinder Mustang option, but if the turbo-four doesn't float your boat, you can always move up to the 460-horsepower GT ...



... and even go large with the 562-horsepower Shelby GT350. Both 'Stangs pack potent V8s.



And the big winner is the Mustang EcoBoost turbo!

Normally when we compare competing vehicles, we don't have a runaway winner. But this time around the EcoBoost Mustang trounced the Camaro turbo.

I liked the Camaro OK — it's a sportier, more tossable take on the mullet mobile. But the 2.0-liter, sub-300-horsepower turbo four feels underpowered and laggy when matched up against the 'Stang's peppy 2.3-liter powerplant.

The Mustang also feels more thought-out and better executed, while the Camaro suffers from a utilitarian interior and some plasticky aspects. The Camaro we tested was also more expensive than the Mustang.

As for the driving, I enjoyed the Mustang as a sort of tool-around-slowly ride, a weekend chariot that can supply a 0-60 mph sprint in about 6 seconds if needed. My colleague Ben Zhang thought the front end was unstable and that it made the back end seem more jittery. Not a bad thing in my book.

The Camaro is objectively more balanced, but that's most likely because of the less beefy motor. In the end, the Mustang drives like a junior muscle car, while the Camaro has a European-sports-car vibe.

In the battle of the entry-level icons, I'd take the Mustang and not look back.



Here's what it's like to spend July 4th in the most expensive vacation town in America

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Hamptons wealthy

Good company, delicious food, and plenty of sunshine: That's the winning formula for any summer vacation.

But in certain corners of the country, the summer soirées seem a bit more extravagant.

Read more: People aren't buying the most expensive homes in the Hamptons. Here's what it's like living in the ritzy seaside community's priciest ZIP code, where the median home price is $5.5 million

We turned to Instagram to find out how the most expensive vacation town in America— Southampton, New York — celebrates the Fourth of July.

The occasion is filled with pool parties, fancy backyard dinners, and beautiful views.

Scroll through the photos below to see for yourself.

Tanza Loudenback previously contributed to this article.

SEE ALSO: The 21 best places to celebrate the 4th of July this year, ranked from most to least expensive

DON'T MISS: 10 cities where you can make 6 figures and still feel broke

Southampton, New York, is located on the East End of Long Island in the Hamptons.

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At least 5% of the homes in Southampton are occupied seasonally, and it doesn't come cheap. The median listing price for a home in the area is just over $1.9 million, making it the most expensive vacation town in America, according to Trulia.

 

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The seaside town is a hotspot for travelers during the summer, especially for those looking to escape New York City for a long weekend.

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Humans and pets alike are known to celebrate the Fourth of July here.

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Relaxing poolside is a popular activity — but it's not a pool in the Hamptons without a fun float.

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When people tire of the pool, the beach awaits.

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But a beach trip isn't complete unless you take the jet skis for a spin.

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The homes are something to look at, but so are their interiors.

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Impressive homes aren't the only display of wealth in Southampton.

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People also get around via Vespa.

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There's no shortage of themed parties and soirées.

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And you can always take the party out on the boat.

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It's not uncommon to spend the weekend in a house with dozens of your closest friends.

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Even though it's a beach town, you're still expected to dress your best.

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It wouldn't be summer in the Hamptons without a bottle of Rosé and a beautiful view to go with it.

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There's always more wine — just head straight to the vineyards.

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There's plenty of the finest shellfish on hand.

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And plenty of shopping to do.

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Plus delicious — and photogenic — desserts.

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Fourth of July fireworks in the Hamptons always make for a spectacular scene.

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As do the sunsets.

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Basically, it's the paradise of the north.

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Cheers!

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5 famous 'facts' about the Fourth of July that aren't true — and what actually happened instead

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American flag face paint USA US America fan

The Fourth of July is all about fireworks, food, and freedom for many Americans.

In the US, Independence Day commemorates the 13 colonies' decision to rebel against King George III and declare their independence.

But be careful before you start regaling your friends with Fourth of July lore. There are plenty of popular myths about Independence Day disguised as common knowledge.

Here are a few "facts" about the Fourth of July that are either unverified or historically bogus:

SEE ALSO: A look at the daily routine of Benjamin Franklin, who didn't always follow his own 'early to bed, early to rise' advice

DON'T MISS: What the Founding Fathers were doing before their act of rebellion made them famous

The Revolutionary War was all about the American colonies and Britain

As any American student can tell you, Independence Day in a nutshell was all about the rebellious colonies finally having it out with their mother country, like a teenager blowing up at an overbearing parent.

Oh, and France helped, too.

It's probably more helpful to look at the war through the lens of the power struggle between France and Britain. The American Revolution was, in many ways, more of an episode in their ongoing drama, as opposed to an earth-shaking event, in and of itself.

The American Revolution took place on the heels of the French and Indian War — one of the theaters of the Seven Years' War between France and Britain.

That North American clash provided a prelude to the Revolution, launching George Washington's military career and prompting a victorious but cash-strapped Britain to raise taxes on its colonies.

France's eventual decision to dive into the fight on the side of the colonists was a chance for payback.

That being said, it's understandable why the American Revolution is a bigger deal in the US than other countries— it is our history, after all. Plus, it's fair to say that the rebellion, along with the spread of the Enlightenment, sparked future global changes, including the French Revolution.



The founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776

On a hot summer day in Philadelphia, the Continental Congress declared the 13 colonies independent from the Crown. Massachusetts delegate and future US president John Adams was certain that he'd witnessed history — and that the date would live on in memory.

"The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America," wrote Adams, in a July 3, 1776 letter to his wife, Abigail.

Poor Adams. He was only off by two days. The Continental Congress actually issued an initial resolution asserting independence from Britain on July 2, which was then revised and finalized on July 4.

However, historians believe that the signing didn't take place until about a month later. Emily Sneff, research manager of the Declaration Resources Project at Harvard University, writes that 49 of the 56 signers didn't even add their signatures the declaration until August 2, 1776: "It took several months, if not years, for all of the signatures to be added."

She cites the Journals of the Continental Congress, which include this August 2 entry: "The declaration of independence being engrossed and compared at the table was signed."

So, why do we gather together to blow things up and grill meat on the Fourth? The Declaration was technically agreed to on that day, and the copies distributed throughout the colonies were dated July 4, 1776.

As a result, that was the date that stuck in people's minds.



The Liberty Bell cracked on Independence Day

The Declaration of Independence and the Liberty Bell are forever tied together in the popular imagination.

As the legend goes, after the colonies declared independence, the citizens of Philadelphia partied so hard that they cracked the bell.

While it's a great story, this tale is total nonsense. First of all, the official announcement about the Declaration didn't go out until July 8.

"On that day, lots of bells were rung to celebrate public readings of the Declaration, and the Liberty Bell was probably one of them," writes historian Joseph Coohill — who blogs about historical myths under the name Professor Buzzkill.

We have no way of knowing for sure, though, since the state house steeple in which the bell was housed was kind of falling apart and under repair at the time, according to the Independence Hall Association.



John Hancock's giant signature was meant to sass King George III

To paraphrase the old story, John Hancock made his mark on the Declaration with a large, flourishing signature. When asked why he had signed his name so large, Hancock quipped that he wanted King George III to be able to read it without his spectacles.

This fun anecdote most likely isn't true.

Sneff writes, "There is no contemporary evidence for what Hancock said as he signed, and at the very least, we know that the engrossed parchment was not sent to King George III."

So why did Hancock, a wealthy merchant, accused smuggler, and president of the Second Continental Congress, leave such a large signature? 

Well, as president, Hancock would have likely signed the document first. Also, take a look at some of the other documents he signed during his tenure in the Continental Congress.

Turns out, the man just had a large signature.



John Adams died on July 4 and gave Thomas Jefferson a shout out on his death bed

This story is certainly half true — Adams and Jefferson both died on July 4, 1826, 50 years after the events of 1776.

They're not the only presidents to undergo a major life event on July 4. James Monroe died on July 4, 1831, while Calvin Coolidge was born July 4, 1872.

According to the popular tale, on his death bed, Adams whispered, "Thomas Jefferson survives" before dying. Unbeknownst to him, Jefferson had passed away a few hours earlier.

It's impossible to confirm that Adams truly included Jefferson in his last words. Contemporary accounts of the former president's death may have been embellished, as "America's Jubilee" author Andrew Burnstein wrote in History News Network.

It's possible that Adams mentioned Jefferson, but it's also possible that this story stems from wishful thinking on the part of observers, given the friendship, rivalry, and history between Adams and Jefferson.

The two had first became fast friends while serving in Continental Congress together. This connection endured, despite their political differences, with Adams writing to Jefferson that "... intimate Correspondence with you . . . is one of the most agreeable Events in my Life," according to the official website of Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's estate.

They had a bitter falling out after campaigning against one another in the divisive election of 1800. They rekindled their correspondence after retiring, sending 158 letters to one another over the course of 14 years.

There's no evidence that Adams mentioned Jefferson, as National Geographic reported. It's possible that Adams' thoughts drifted back to his estranged friend or that summer in Philadelphia as he lay dying, but we'll never know for sure.




What the Founding Fathers were doing before their act of rebellion made them famous

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Writing Declaration Thomas Jefferson John Adams Ben Franklin

The Fourth of July means summer fun, fireworks, and lots of red, white, and blue decorations, for most of us.

It also marks the day that the Second Continental Congress approved a resolution to declare independence from Britain 243 years ago.

Historians believe that most of the founders didn't actually sign the document until about a month later. But July 4 was the date on the copies that got circulated around the colonies, so that's what the US went with.

Many Americans learn about famous founders like Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson in school.

Read more: Many people incorrectly think that the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4 — here's the real reason the US celebrates that day

But many of the guys who showed up in sweltering Philadelphia during the summer of 1776 were relatively obscure. And a good number of Founding Fathers, like Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, James Madison, and John Jay, didn't even sign the Declaration.

So let's take a look at the lives and careers of some of these lesser known founders. Perhaps unsurprisingly, many of the signers were prominent members of their communities. They worked as lawyers, physicians, merchants, and planters before being elected to the Continental Congress. A vast majority of them also owned slaves.

Here's a breakdown of the career paths of all 56 signers and what brought them to Philadelphia in the sweltering summer of 1776:

SEE ALSO: The 9 weirdest jobs of America's Founding Fathers

DON'T MISS: The top 20 presidents in US history, according to historians

SEE ALSO: 5 famous 'facts' about the Fourth of July that aren't true — and what actually happened instead

John Hancock was a wealthy smuggler

The man with the most famous signature in American history led an allegedly illicit career before he entered the political realm.

On the surface, the president of the Second Continental Congress was a prominent New England merchant and a major financial backer of the revolutionary cause in Boston.

However, Hancock's mercantile fortune was allegedly bolstered through the illegal smuggling of products like Dutch tea, glass, lead, paper, and French molasses, according to the Boston Tea Party Historical Society.

He was charged with smuggling, but was acquitted thanks to his savvy lawyer — John Adams.



John Adams was an unfulfilled teacher before becoming a lawyer

John Adams established a reputation as a talented lawyer that would launch him on the path to the presidency. However, his first job mostly involved keeping order in the classroom.

After graduating Harvard, Adams took his first job as as a schoolmaster in Worcester, Massachusetts, according to the University of Groningen's biography of the second US president.

The career was not fulfilling for Adams and he was often filled with doubt, as evidenced by the personal entries in his famous journal, which the Massachusetts Historical Society has posted online. To keep up with his own reading and writing, Adams would sometimes ask the smartest student to lead class.



Samuel Adams was an incompetent tax collector

The founding father — and inspiration behind the modern day beer company— had a rocky start to his career after graduating from Harvard in 1740.

His first few business ventures ended poorly, and he dropped out of studying law. Even worse, he was an incompetent tax collector, neglecting "to collect the public levies and to keep proper accounts," according to Encyclopedia Britannica.

He later achieved great influence in local politics, founding the Sons of Liberty, Boston's revolutionary group. This activity allowed Adams to become a driving force in the growing movement against Britain's series of new taxes, which ultimately snowballed into the Revolution.



Benjamin Franklin was a runaway printer

Philosopher, statesman, inventor, author — Benjamin Franklin was a true Renaissance Man.

His curious and independent nature was clear early on in his career. Franklin had been apprenticed to his older brother, a printer. This meant that he was legally bound to serve in the role for a set number of years.

The static situation wasn't ideal for him.

According to "Bonds of Citizenship: Law and the Labors of Emancipation" by Hoang Gia Phan, Franklin wrote that he "lik'd [the printer's profession] much better than that of [his] Father, but still had a Hankering for the sea."

So he ran off. Franklin absconded to Philadelphia, where he worked as a rogue printer, before traveling to London to work as a typesetter.



Thomas Jefferson was an egalitarian lawyer

After graduating from the College of William and Mary in 1764, Jefferson began to study law, clerking in the office of fellow signer George Wythe. 

He was admitted to the bar in 1769. Jefferson handled 900 matters while specializing in land cases as a lawyer in the General Court in Williamsburg, Virginia, according to Encyclopedia Virginia. That same year, he was elected to become a delegate in the House of Burgesses.

Influenced by his political ideology, Jefferson served clients from all classes. As he wrote in his "Autobiography" in 1821, he wanted to create a "system by which every fiber would be eradicated of ancient or future aristocracy; and a foundation laid for a government truly republican."



Edward Rutledge was a free speech advocate

At 26, Rutledge was the youngest signer at of the Declaration of Independence. 

At the age of 20, Rutledge sailed to England to study law at the Inner Temple in London. He returned to the colonies in 1773 and began practicing law in 1773.

When he was just 24, Rutledge "gained recognition as a patriot when he successfully defended a printer, Thomas Powell, who had been imprisoned by the Crown for printing an article critical of the Loyalist upper house of the colonial legislature," according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

During the war, he was captured during the occupation of Charleston, along with his co-signers Arthur Middleton and Thomas Heyward.



Roger Sherman was a well-rounded Massachusetts official

Thomas Jefferson is quoted as calling Sherman "a man who never said a foolish thing in his life," according to "The Portfolio" by Joseph Dennie and John Elihu Hall.

He is the only person to sign the US Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Association, the Articles of Confederation, and the US Constitution.

The Connecticut representative to the Continental Congress received a fragmented education, growing up in a Massachusetts border town. Eventually, Sherman was urged to study law, and was accepted to the bar in 1754.

Before he became involved in creating and signing the four most important documents in early American history, he served as justice of the peace, justice of the Superior Court of Connecticut, and New Milford's representative in the General Assembly.



Francis Lewis survived two shipwrecks

Orphaned at the age of five, Lewis was sent from his hometown of Llandaff, Wales up to live with relatives Scotland. He learned Gaelic, received an education from London's Westminster School, and was apprenticed to a mercantile business in the capital.

After receiving some of his inheritance at the age of 21, Lewis left England for the American colonies. The future signer settled down in Philadelphia and became a merchant. Lewis traveled throughout northern European ports and survived two shipwrecks off the coast of Ireland, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

During the French and Indian War, Lewis signed with the British as a clothing contractor at Fort Oswego and supplied the soldiers with uniforms, but was captured in 1756 and imprisoned in France.

Seven years later, Lewis was released and largely retired from business. Instead, he focused on revolutionary activities and became a founding member of the Sons of Liberty, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

During the Battle of Brooklyn in 1776, British soldiers attacked burned his home in Whitestone, New York and captured his wife, Elizabeth. She never recovered from her imprisonment and passed away a few years later in 1779, after reuniting with Lewis in Philadelphia.



Robert Treat Paine was a failed ship's master and an itinerant preacher

After his father lost their family's fortune, Robert Treat Paine served as a ship's master on several financially unsuccessful voyages to the Carolinas, Spain, the Azores, and Greenland. During one trip, he managed to get awarded an MA degree from Harvard in absentia.

With personal interests in literature, electricity, and even clock-making, Paine taught school for some time after graduating from Harvard, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

Later gigs included a stint as a militia chaplain and some itinerant preaching, before he was admitted to the bar in 1757. Paine eventually moved to Taunton, Massachusetts, where he became very involved in local politics.

During his legal career, Paine became a rival of John Adams. The two lawyers faced off against one another in the tense, landmark trial of the British soldiers who shot civilians during the Boston Massacre. As the defense attorney, Adams prevailed and the accused were acquitted or given reduced sentences.



George Taylor was an indentured servant

Originally immigrating from Northern Ireland as an indentured servant, Taylor worked for an iron-master as a laborer and a bookkeeper.

After the iron-master died, Taylor married his widow and opened up two more iron-works. In 1757, he became the justice of the peace in Pennsylvania's Bucks County.

According to USHistory.org, he was a last minute addition to the Continental Congress: "In 1775 he was appointed to replace a member of the Pennsylvania delegation who refused to support independence. He arrived too late to vote, but did sign the Declaration."



John Morton was a Pennsylvania sheriff

John Morton is now largely remembered as the first of the signers to die, passing away in 1777 at the age of 51.

The descendant of Finnish immigrants, Morton was born in Pennsylvania in 1725. He was a member and speaker of the colony's assembly, served as sheriff of Chester County, and was a justice of the colony's supreme court.

"In 1765, Morton attended the secretive Stamp Act Congress in New York as a delegate from Pennsylvania, placing him at the center of the controversy over unjust British taxation policies," according to the Johnny Morton Project.



Button Gwinnett went through a number of rocky financial ventures

Button Gwinnett's name might sound odd, but it's worth quite a lot of money nowadays.

According to the Atlanta Business Chronicle, Gwinnett's rare signature can fetch up to $800,000, making it the most valuable of the signers of the Declaration.

Gwinnett originally hailed from England, sailing to Savannah in 1765 as a merchant. The Georgia Historical Society's Stan Deaton writes that after his mercantile business crashed and burned, he bought St. Catherines Island and became a planter, only to fail financially again in 1773.

On the eve of the revolution, he became active in local politics again. However, his career didn't last. In 1777, he was shot and killed during a duel with a political rival.



Benjamin Harrison was a college dropout

The man who would become known as the "Falstaff" of the Continental Congress was born to a powerful planter family in Virginia and attended the College of William and Mary.

He dropped out of school at the age of 19, after a bolt of lightning killed his father and two of his sisters, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

Starting in 1749, he served in Virginia's House of Burgesses for 25 years and became governor of the state after the Revolution.

"John Adams wrote that Harrison had 'contributed many pleasantries that steadied rough sessions,'" reports The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

His son, William Henry Harrison, was elected US president in 1840, and his great grandson Benjamin Harrison was also elected US president in 1888.



Philip Livingston was a New York City alderman

Born into a wealthy Albany family, Philip Livingston attended Yale and became a successful merchant, according to The New Netherland Institute.

In 1754, Livingston was elected to become New York City's alderman. Later on, he became a member of the state's house of representatives and became involved with the colony's rebel government in 1775. He was also a founder of King's College, which is now known as Columbia University.



Benjamin Rush helped combat a yellow fever epidemic

A handful of practicing physicians signed the Declaration, but Benjamin Rush was the only one among them with an actual medical degree.

At the age of 14, Rush left Philadelphia to study at the College of New Jersey, now known as Princeton University. Upon returning home, he began apprenticing with some of Philadelphia's most distinguished physicians, eventually joining the new department of medicine at the College of Philadelphia, according to the University of Pennsylvania's archives. During this time, he chronicled the yellow fever that swept through the city in 1762.

Rush went on to study at the University of Edinburgh, St. Thomas's Hospital in London, and with physicians in France. Upon returning to Philadelphia in 1769, he opened a practice geared toward the poor and served as a professor at the College of Philadelphia. He published pro-revolutionary articles in pamphlets, along with the first American chemistry textbook.



Richard Stockton was a Princeton trustee

Stockton attended the College of New Jersey, now known as Princeton, which was possible in part due to land donations from his father. After graduating, he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1754 and served as a trustee of his alma mater.

After touring in England, Scotland, and Ireland, he joined New Jersey's Provincial Council and the colony's Supreme Court.

Stockton had the misfortune of being captured and imprisoned during the Revolutionary War. While conditions for prisoners could be brutal and Stockton may have been singled out for being a signer, as historian J.L. Bell points out, some tales of his mistreatment at the hands of the English may stem from 19th century exaggerations.

Stockton survived his captivity and was freed, although he died before the war ended in 1781, according to the Journal of the American Revolution.



George Wythe was one of the nation's first college law professors

On the Declaration itself, George Wythe's signature comes first out of all the the Virginian delegates, as a testament to his lengthy career.

Wythe first practiced law in Elizabeth City County in 1746 at the age of 20, and later served as a clerk in the House of Burgesses, according to Colonial Williamsburg.

He served as a mentor to other future political leaders, such as Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and Henry Clay.

A lifelong scholar, Wythe studied the classics, served in the House of Burgesses, served as an attorney general, was the nation's first college law professor, served on the board of the College of William and Mary, and helped frame the Constitution after the war.



Francis Hopkinson was a poet and songwriter

It's likely that the story about Betsy Ross designing the US flag is just that — a story.

In fact, Biography.com reports, Francis Hopkinson is a more likely candidate when it comes to designing the stars and stripes.

Hopkinson received his bachelor's, master's, and law degree from what is now the University of Pennsylvania. He penned treaties with the Delaware and the Iroquois tribes on behalf of the state of Pennsylvania, before moving to New Jersey to work as a customs collector. In 1767, he moved to England in an unsuccessful bid to be appointed a higher position within the customs apparatus.

Returning back to the colonies, he opened a dry goods business, became a customs collector in Delaware, and later became a member of New Jersey's Provincial Council.

His contributions to society went beyond politics and trade — Hopkinson also composed numerous essays, satirical poems, and popular songs including one called "The Battle of the Kegs." He also claimed to have designed at least one version of the US flag.



Charles Carroll of Carrollton helped burn a ship bringing tea to Maryland

A member of the Maryland delegation, Charles Carroll was the only Roman Catholic to sign the Declaration. He was also the last survivor of all of the signers, dying at the age of 96 in 1832, according to the official website of the Charles Carroll House.

Long before he became the last living signer of the Declaration, he was born into a prominent and wealthy Annapolis planting family. He clandestinely received his education at a Jesuit school, with his cousin John Carroll, who would become the first Catholic bishop in the US. Carroll went on to study at St. Omers in Flanders and later at the Inner Temple in London.

In 1773, Carroll penned a series of letters to the Maryland Gazette, promoting pro-independence views. The following year, he played a role in the burning of the Peggy Stewart, a ship carrying tea to Maryland.



Josiah Bartlett was a cash-strapped and innovative doctor

Originally hailing from Amesburg Massachusetts, Bartlett moved to New Hampshire to practice as a physician at the age of 21. When he arrived in the state he would later represent in the Continental Congress, the young doctor carried only "about $30, a small horse, saddle, bridle, saddlebags, with a small bill of medicine, a pocket case of surgeon's instruments and some instruments for pulling teeth," according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

Bartlett's medical career was distinguished. He once drank a lot of cider to cure his own dangerous fever. Later, when diphtheria tore through Kingston, New Hampshire, Bartlett administered the relatively new treatment of quinine to his patients, instead of bleeding them.

Here's a fun fact for all you "West Wing" fans: his fictional descendant and namesake is US President Josiah Bartlett.



Thomas Lynch Jr. studied law in London and later disappeared

Out of all the signers, Thomas Lynch Jr.'s signature is one of the hardest to come by. That's not surprising, given that he vanished at the age of 30.

Born in South Carolina, Lynch traveled to England to receive an education at Cambridge University and study law in London.

After returning home in 1772, he became "politically engaged," according to USHistory.org, and took on a role as a company commander in a South Carolina regiment. Shortly after retiring from the Continental Congress due to a bout of illness, he and his wife were lost at sea when their ship disappeared.



William Whipple was a young ship's captain

New Hampshire representative William Whipple went to sea at a young age. According to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, Whipple was the captain of his own ship by 21.

NBC reported that, after becoming a successful merchant and politician, Whipple put his seafaring background to use, serving as the chairman of the marine, foreign relations and quartermaster committees in Continental Congress.



Matthew Thornton was a physician who served in King George's War

Thornton's family emigrated from Ireland to America when he was three. Growing up in New Hampshire, he became a physician. According to USHistory.org, at the age of 31, he became the New Hampshire militia's official surgeon during King George's War.

Despite his involvement in the anti-Stamp Act agitation, The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence reports that he "held a commission as colonel of militia" under the royal colonial government.



Robert Morris ran an importing business

Morris was born in England, but came to Philadelphia at the age of 10. USHistory.org reports that he was "apprenticed to the counting room of Charles Willing at the age of 16." He partnered with his employer's son after Willing died two years later.

Morris's importing business thrived over the years, but British measures to tax merchants caused him to develop pro-independence views. Ultimately, Morris would go on to finance the revolution against Britain.



Elbridge Gerry was a Harvard-educated merchant

The nation's fifth vice president was born into a prominent merchant family in Marblehead, Massachusetts, a bastion of anti-Crown feeling. After graduating from Harvard, he joined the family business.

According to the official website of the US Senate, Gerry "played a limited role in the resistance movement until the spring of 1770, when he served on a local committee to enforce the ban on the sale and consumption of tea."



Stephen Hopkins was the scientifically-inclined cousin of Benedict Arnold

This cousin of Benedict Arnold can be credited with helping to put his hometown of Providence, Rhode Island on the map, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

At 23, he became a justice of peace in Scituate, RI. Down the line, he became the first chancellor of Rhode Island College — now known as Brown University — and was elected governor of Rhode Island in 1755. An avid student of the sciences, he also helped to build a telescope in Providence, which was used to track the path of Venus in June 1769.

Hopkins also makes an appearance in John Trumbull's famous painting "The Declaration of Independence." He's the guy wearing a hat in the background.



William Ellery was a customs collector

After graduating from Harvard, this Newport, Rhode Island native joined his father in the mercantile business.

Ellery eventually shifted into politics, according to the National Park Service's biography, eventually becoming a customs collector and the clerk of the Rhode Island General Assembly. In 1770, he was admitted to the bar and became immersed in revolutionary activity with the Sons of Liberty.



Samuel Huntington was a cooper's apprentice

Born the fourth of 10 children in Connecticut's Scotland Parish, Huntington grew up helping his father on the family farm. As a teenager, he was apprenticed to a cooper, "completing his apprenticeship willingly but without enthusiasm," according to to the Connecticut State Library.

The future president of the Continental Congress used his spare time to study law in the library of Rev. Ebenezer Devotion. He was admitted to the bar in 1754, and in 1761 he married the reverend's daughter, Martha Devotion.



William Williams was a jaded French and Indian War veteran

This signer was initially set to continue his father's legacy and become a Christian minister after graduating from Harvard.

Instead, he followed his uncle — and early Williams College benefactor— Colonel Ephraim Williams to battle, after the French and Indian War erupted. Ephraim lost his life after being shot in the head near Lake George in 1755.

"William returned home after this wartime experience with a feeling of contempt for the British officers in general, who were haughty and who openly regarded the colonists as inferior men. He put aside the idea of further religious study, opened a store in Lebanon, and prospered as a merchant," according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

He embarked on a political career at the age of 25, becoming a town clerk, then a selectman for the town of Lebanon, Connecticut, and representative and speaker of the lower house for the Connecticut Assembly.



Oliver Wolcott was at the top of his class in Yale

After graduating in the top of his class from Yale, Wolcott received a captain's commission to fight in the French and Indian War.

The Litchfield Historical Society reports that after the war, the Windsor, Connecticut native studied medicine for some time, and then moved to Litchfield to become a merchant and the county's first sheriff.

The future Revolutionary War general worked as an assembly representative and held positions within the local militia.



William Floyd was a prominent Long Island businessman

Floyd grew up in Brookhaven, Long Island and lost his father when he was 17. As the eldest son, he inherited his wealthy family's estate and became an "excellent farmer and manager," according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

In addition to farming, Floyd's estate featured a dock on the Atlantic Ocean, allowing him to trade and fish for seafood. He quickly became a prominent figure in eastern Long Island, and held positions as a Brookhaven trustee, militia officer, and member of the local assembly.



Lewis Morris was a judge

This Yale graduate was the half-brother of founding father Gouverneur Morris, according The New Netherland Institute. Early on in his career, helped "his father in running the large agricultural estate, named Morrisania, located in what is now New York City."

In 1760, Britain appointed Morris to a judgeship of the Admiralty Court — he resigned from the post in 1774 when he became more active in revolutionary politics.



John Witherspoon was the president of Princeton

In addition to being a signer of the Declaration, John Witherspoon also became Princeton's sixth president in 1767. He was the only college president to sign the document.

The University of Edinburgh graduate was originally an ordained Church of Scotland minister. "The trustees of [Princeton] first elected him president in 1766, after Samuel Finley's death; but Mrs. Witherspoon was reluctant to leave Scotland, and he declined," according to W. Frank Craven's entry in "A Princeton Companion."

However, the efforts of medical student and future fellow Declaration signer Benjamin Rush persuaded the Witherspoons, their five children, and their 300 books to make the journey across the Atlantic.

"They were greeted a mile out of town by tutors and students, who escorted them to Morven, home of Richard Stockton," Craven writes. "That evening the students celebrated the occasion by 'illuminating' Nassau Hall with a lighted tallow dip in each window."

He strived to fix the college's increasingly dire financial situation by increasing enrollment and improving academic standards.



John Hart was a justice of the peace

It's unclear exactly when or where this New Jersey delegate was born, but it's likely that he lacked much formal schooling.

However, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, Hart "... was well regarded for his common sense, was reasonably well read as proved by his understanding of the law, and showed acumen on business matters."

He bought property in the town of Hopewell, New Jersey and eventually purchased a large mill in the area, as well. He was elected justice of the peace in 1755 and served on the New Jersey's colonial legislature.



Abraham Clark was known as a 'poor man's councilor'

Born in Elizabethtown, New Jersey, Clark started off as a surveyor and later switched to law.

According to the "Biographical Annals of the Civil Government of the United States," he became known as the "poor man's councilor" due to his penchant for representing and giving legal advice to members of the lower class.



George Clymer was a counting house apprentice

According to the University of Pennsylvania's Archives, Clymer got his start apprenticing in a counting house. By the late 1750s, he had established himself as a prominent Philadelphia merchant.

As a result, he became a city councilman and alderman and served on several local committees that pressed for revolution.



James Smith was a surveyor and a lawyer

Smith was born in Ireland, but his family eventually settled in Pennsylvania, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

The founder attended Philadelphia Academy, which is now known as the University of Pennsylvania. After graduating, he became a surveyor and, subsequently, a lawyer.



James Wilson was a college tutor

After dropping out of St. Andrews due to financial difficulties, this Scottish native took up tutoring and later learned merchant accounting.

According to the University of Pennsylvania's Archives, Wilson came to the colonies in 1765, as a tutor at what is now the University of Pennsylvania. He earned his M.A. from the school and studied law.

In the 1770s, he became involved with the pro-independence movement Pennsylvania and began publishing an anti-Crown pamphlet.



George Ross was a prosecutor

Studying law at his older brother's office, Ross was admitted to the bar at the age of 20. According to USHistory.org, he served Carlisle, Pennsylvania as a Crown prosecutor for 12 years, and then served in the colony's legislature.

"There he came to understand first hand the rising conflict between the colonial assemblies and the Parliament," USHistory.org reports. "He was an unabashed supporter of the powers of the former."



Caesar Rodney was a sickly sheriff

The Dover, Delaware native inherited his family's plantation at the age of 17, after his father's death, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

He was sickly throughout his life, stricken with asthma and, later on, facial cancer. Still, he ascended to the office of Kent County sheriff, delegate from Kent County to the colonial legislature, and judge of the Delaware Superior Court, among others.



George Read was an attorney general

Born in Cecil County, Maryland, Read studied law and was admitted to the bar in Philadelphia at the age of 19. Ten years later, Read was appointed attorney general.

According to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, he attempted to warn "British government of the danger of attempting to tax the colonies without giving them direct representation in Parliament" but eventually resigned when that proved fruitless.



Thomas McKean was a loan office trustee

After studying law in his home state of Pennsylvania, McKean left to join the Delaware bar in 1754. He also gained certification to work as a barrister in 1758.

He became involved in local governments, serving as justice of the peace, trustee of the local loan office, deputy attorney general for New Castle County, and representative of the Delaware Assembly, according to the The American National Biography.

In 17773, he moved to Philadelphia, where he became an opponent against the Crown.



Samuel Chase became known as the 'Maryland Demosthenes'

The future Supreme Court Justice was born in Maryland and began to study law in Annapolis in 1759.

During his tenure in the colony's legislature, Chase became known as the "Maryland Demosthenes" due to his revolutionary fervor and strength as an orator, according to The American National Biography.



William Paca was an anti-poll tax activist

According to USHistory.org, Paca obtained his master's degree from Philadelphia College at the age of 18 before moving to Annapolis and the Inner Temple in London to study law.

After being admitted to the bar, Paca became involved in local politics, opposing the royal governor's poll tax.



Thomas Stone was a well-traveled lawyer

Born near Welcome, Maryland in 1743, Stone decided early on that he wanted to study law, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence. He moved to Annapolis to study, and later to Frederick, Maryland to practice after being admitted to the bar at 21.

He started practicing on the circuit court in 1765, a career path that saw him traveling between Port Tobacco, Frederick, Annapolis, and Philadelphia.

"This travel pattern was not only long and time consuming, but dangerous and fatiguing, all the while maintaining active law practice in two localities," The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence reported.



Richard Henry Lee was a 'fiery' planter

Lee belonged to an influential planting family. After receiving his formal education in Yorkshire, England and serving as a justice of the peace in Westmoreland County, Virginia, Lee was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1758.

According to the official website of the Lee family's estate, Stratford Hall, Lee was a skilled orator and "possessed a fiery, rebellious spirit," which earned him an enemy in Lord Dunmore, the royal governor of Virginia.

Along with his brother, Francis Lightfoot Lee, he was active in revolutionary activities even since the passage of the Stamp Act and promoted the foundation of the Committees of Correspondence in 1768, a system that allowed the colonies to exchange information and ultimately rallied against the Crown.



Thomas Nelson threw a one-man tea party in protest of the Crown's tax policy

Born in Yorktown to a powerful family, Thomas Nelson Jr. became "a leading merchant, businessman, Burgess, and member of the Governor's Council," according to the National Parks Service.

Nelson was sent to England to receive his education at Christ's College at Cambridge University. He returned to the colonies and began serving in Virginia's House of Burgesses in 1761. The legislative body was dissolved in 1774, after it condemned the Crown's reaction to the Boston Tea Party.

According to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, "To protest this action, Nelson began spending some of his personal fortune, sending needed supplies to Boston. He arranged a Yorktown tea party and personally threw two half-chests of tea into the York River."



Francis Lightfoot Lee was a reluctant politician

Francis Lightfoot Lee was born to a prominent and powerful Virginia planting family.

According to the official website of the Lee family's estate, Stratford Hall, Lee was not eager to enter public service and serve in the First Virginia Convention on the eve of the Revolution: "He served reluctantly at first, preferring to spend time with his new wife and the building of their home, Menokin. But as the Revolution neared, Frank cast his lot with the Virginia patriots."

Lee befriended Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry, and later served in the second Continental Congress with his brother, Richard Henry Lee.



Carter Braxton was a calming influence in Virginia politics

Born to a wealthy planting family in Virginia. Braxton received an education the College of William and Mary. According to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, he moved to England in 1757 for three years, after the death of his first wife. Upon returning, he was elected to the House of Burgesses.

Before the Revolutionary War broke out in Virginia, Braxton helped to calm the turbulent political crisis that followed after the royal governor confiscated Williamsburg's store of gunpowder. 



William Hooper was a Tory who was once attacked by anti-government rioters

Defying his parents' wishes that he would enter the Anglican clergy, Hooper obtained an M.A. in theology from Harvard, but went on to practice law, according to the North Carolina History Project.

Before the Revolutionary War, Hooper became a deputy attorney, a deputy attorney general, and a state representative in North Carolina. He supported the Crown throughout much of his early political career. Anti-government rioters even attacked him in 1770, dragging him through the streets of Hillsborough.

In the following years, Hooper began to shed his loyalist mantle and adopt more rebellious opinions.



Joseph Hewes was a New Jersey native living in North Carolina

How did this New Jersey native and Princeton graduate come to represent North Carolina during the Continental Congress?

After graduating, Hewes moved to Philadelphia to apprentice with a local importer and merchant, and later set up his own successful mercantile venture, according to the North Carolina History Project.

He moved to North Carolina in 1760 and was elected to the colony's legislature only three years later.



John Penn was a legal apprentice

Starting at the age of 18, Penn served as a legal apprentice to his uncle, Virginia House of Burgesses member Edmund Pendleton. In 1762, he received a law license and moved to Granville County, North Carolina, according to the North Carolina History Project.

At the age of 34, he was elected to North Carolina's Provincial Congress, and then selected to represent the colony in the Continental Congress of 1775.



Thomas Heyward was a tourist traveling around Europe

Born to a South Carolina planter family, Heyward received a formal education and then began studying law with a prominent barrister. Later, Heyward travel to England, to finish his studies in Middle Temple.

He took several years to tour Europe and then returned to the colonies, having adopted anti-Crown sentiments, according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

During the war, he was captured during the occupation of Charleston. He nearly drowned after falling off a prison ship, but survived by clinging to the rudder.



Arthur Middleton was the member of a secret pro-independence committee

After graduating from Cambridge University and studying law at London's Middle Temple, South Carolina native Arthur Middleton took two years off to tour throughout Europe.

In 1763, Middleton returned to South Carolina at the age of 21. According to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, he became a justice of the peace and a member of the colony's House of Commons, where he joined a secret committee to prepare South Carolina for war.

In 1770, he and his wife Mary embarked on another three year tour of Europe. Upon returning, he continued to support radical policies, including "tar and feathering and confiscation of estates belonging to Loyalists who had fled the country," according to The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence.

Middleton was captured during the occupation of Charleston, but was freed in 1781 and continued to serve in South Carolina's government.



Lyman Hall was a Yale-educated physician

Hall started out as a Yale-educated Congregational minister, but became a physician in 1753, according to the Georgia Historical Society's Stan Deaton. In Georgia, he balanced his medical career with an avid interest in local revolutionary activity.



George Walton was a bored carpenter

After being orphaned at a young age, Walton was adopted by an uncle who apprenticed him as a carpenter. However, carpentry held little interest for the future signer of the Declaration.

Walton was probably around 20 years old when he arrived in Savannah, Georgia to pursue a legal career. "By the eve of the American Revolution he was one of the most successful lawyers in Georgia," writes the Georgia Historical Society's Stan Deaton.



How to perfectly roast a chicken in the oven

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how to roast a chicken

  • Whatever way you choose to enjoy the delicious results, roasting a chicken is a basic kitchen skill that should be in every cook's bag of tricks.
  • It's an economical, easy, and undeniably tasty way to prepare chicken that's flavorful and juicy. 
  • Since some people are a bit intimidated at the thought of roasting a chicken, we've broken the process down into easy steps.
  • Aside from an oven and a whole chicken, it doesn't take much in the way of equipment to roast your bird.
  • You'll need a sturdy roasting pan like the Cuisinart Chef's Classic Pan and a meat thermometer like this one from ThermoPro.

There's nothing quite as tasty and versatile as a whole chicken roasted to golden perfection. Add roasted potatoes and carrots, and you have a traditional Sunday night dinner that can't be beaten. 

You can also shred the cooked meat and add it to a green salad for a nutritionally complete lunch; make chicken salad with the diced meat, mayonnaise, chopped celery, and your favorite spices and enjoy it between slices of whole-grain bread; or combine cubed roasted chicken with bagged mixed cut veggies, chicken broth, and cooked noodles for the easiest-ever chicken noodle soup. 

Whatever your intentions for the cooked bird, we break down the steps to achieve the tastiest results in this guide.

We also recommend a great roasting pan and meat thermometer to get if you don't have them yet.

How to roast a chicken in the oven

  1. As a general rule, a three-to-four pound chicken will serve four, while a four-to-five pound chicken will serve five or six, so choose your poultry accordingly.
  2. Cut and remove the plastic supermarket wrapper from the raw chicken, and pluck out the bag of giblets from inside the chicken's body cavity. You can save the giblets to cook in a soup or stew or toss them, depending on your preferences. 
  3. Do not wash or rinse the raw bird. While this practice was often encouraged in the past, today the US Department of Agriculture recommends against it, as it isn't likely to entirely remove bacteria from the raw meat, but may well spread harmful bacteria around your kitchen. 
  4. Preheat your oven to 425 degrees, with the rack set in the oven's center. 
  5. Put the chicken in your roasting pan with the breast facing up. Blot the bird with paper towels to remove excess moisture. If there is any loose skin or fat, cut or pull that off. If you don't have a roasting pan, we recommend this one from Cuisinart.
  6. For the perfect golden crust, you'll need to rub some sort of oil into the chicken's skin before roasting. Melted butter is one absolutely delicious option. Olive oil is another excellent choice, although you can also use vegetable, safflower, or sunflower oil. Whichever you choose, massage the oil over the outer surface of the chicken. 
  7. Add extra flavor to the chicken meat with a handful of fresh herbs placed inside the bird's body cavity. Fresh rosemary, sage, or thyme is especially good. You can also toss in a few garlic cloves, a sliced lemon, or even a few pieces of chopped celery. Don't overstuff the bird, however, which can prevent it from cooking through evenly. For the final touch, sprinkle salt over the oiled surface of the chicken. 
  8. If you want a full meal cooked in one pan, now's the time to add cut up potatoes, onions, or carrots to the roasting pan. Spread them around the chicken, but leave some space between the bird and the vegetables for airflow. 
  9. Pop the roasting pan into the heated oven. Do not cover the pan with foil, as that will cause the bird to steam, not roast. 
  10. As a general rule, it will take one hour to one-and-a-half hours for the chicken to cook to perfection. You'll know the bird is done when the skin is a golden brown, juices run clear — not pink or red — when you poke the chicken with a fork, and most importantly, a meat thermometer like the ThermoPro Digital Instant Read Thermometer reads at least 165 degrees when inserted into the thickest part of the thigh. 
  11. Remove the roasting pan from the oven, and let it sit for at least 10 to 20 minutes before carving. This lets the juices settle evenly throughout the chicken meat for the most flavorful and tender results.  
  12. Enjoy!

Buy the Cuisinart Chef's Classic Stainless Roasting Pan on Amazon for $41.31

Buy the ThermoPro Digital Instant Read Thermometer on Amazon for $12.99

Read our guide to the best meat thermometers.

Join the conversation about this story »

The best bungee cords you can buy

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  • A good set of bungee cords can secure heavy loads to the roof of a car or bed of a truck, keeping luggage, tools, and other things reliably in place.
  • Bungee cords are also useful for keeping bins and boxes safe on garage shelves, preventing injury caused by falling objects (and often precipitated by small hands).
  • The Cartman Bungee Cord Assortment Jar is our top pick because this fairly-priced variety pack has cords that will work for just about every common household need.

In the late spring of 2016, my family and I packed everything we owned into an 18-wheeler and moved clear across the country, leaving Los Angeles and settling outside New York City. And if not for about a dozen bungee cords, that drive would have been a mess. 

At the core of a bungee cord is multiple strands of an extruded elastic material that's coated for heat resistance and then wrapped in a highly flexible sheath, usually made from polypropylene. They most likely get their name from an English slang term for rubber used in Colonial India, though the origins are unclear.

What is clear, though, are the many ways bungee cords can be of use every day. Beyond the obvious applications of strapping cargo to the top of a car or keeping a heavy bin secured to a shelf, bungee cords are helpful for both short- and long-term solutions to common issues.  

Here are the best bungee cords you can buy in 2019:

Keep scrolling to check out our top picks.

The best overall

If you can't find the right bungee cord for your project in the Cartman Bungee Cords Assortment Jar, then you might need to consider ratchet straps, instead. 

I got a jar of assorted bungees from Cartman years ago, and save for a few cords that have been lost in the shuffle of life or loaned out but never returned (I still remember, Kevin!) I still use several of them every day of the week. 

We have a couple of the 18-inch cords keeping extension cords looped and hanging on the wall, while one of the 32-inch cables keeps a bin filled with tools secured to a garage shelf. I use one of the 24-inch cords to secure a trash can lid outside (sorry, raccoon) and I keep several of these bungees in each car at all times because who knows what will come up?

With mini cables as short as 10 inches, a pair of 40-inch bungees, and multiple lengths in between, there is a bungee cord in here suitable for just about every project until you get into the range of securing commercial-grade loads.

I've trusted these cords to tie-down a heavy rotomolded plastic canoe, to secure stacked logs, and with many other decidedly trying tasks, and they have performed well and held up well over the years, too. Well, all but the minis, which are so small and meek I've never really found a good use, but so it goes. 

Pros: Great variety of sizes, durable construction, good price for large kit

Cons: Smaller cables to weak for practical use

Buy a 24-piece Cartman Bungee Cords Assortment Jar on Amazon for $16.99



The best heavy-duty bungee cord

A Ram-Pro Heavy-Duty Bungee Cord stretches past 11 feet and can be used to secure multi-hundred-pound loads on cargo racks, trailers, or in truck beds.

So you have a motorcycle or ATV to strap down in the bed of your trunk? Or maybe a few suitcases you need to transport on top of your car? Or perhaps you just cut down a 10-foot Christmas tree and now you have a hundred-mile drive home? Good thing you also have a set of Ram-Pro Heavy-Duty Bungee Cords on hand, because heavy, large loads like these are precisely why the company makes such long, rugged cords.

Each 72-inch Ram-Pro Heavy-Duty Bungee Cord can stretch to more than 11 feet long, spanning the widest truck or trailer beds and big enough to wrap over large cargo. As you get six of these cables per order, when you use multiple bungees together, even that larger cargo will be reliably secured.

The hooks on a Ram-Pro bungee are made from stainless steel and coated in PVC, so they won't cause scratches. The polyester weave jacket won't cause abrasions on a car's paint job, either. However according to a number of customers, those jackets won't hold up well to UV damage, so once each hauling session is over, move these cords inside out of the sun.

Overall, people are fans of the Ram-Pro Heavy-Duty Bungee Cords, though: They have a 4.2-star rating on Amazon with more than 100 reviews written.

Pros: Extra long with good stretch, suitable for commercial use, good price for a six-pack

Cons: Jackets not UV-resistant, strong odor when new

Buy a six-pack o Ram-Pro Heavy-Duty Bungee Cords on Amazon for $20.99



The best mini bungee cord

The HDX Mini Bungee Cords are perfect for supporting all sorts of small items, from keeping rakes upright against the wall to keeping a basket of sporting goods in place on the shelf.

Google around a bit and you'll find many creative ways to use bungee cords beyond the basics of securing cargo to roof racks or trailers. 

You can use a small bungee cord as a makeshift holder for a roll of paper towels or toilet paper or to keep rolls of wrapping paper together. You can use a bungee cord to make an impromptu mobile for a baby or a hanging car toy for a toddler. Bungee cords can make dividers on a shelf, keeping different garments separated and stacked, or they can help keep jars or cans of food from falling off pantry shelves.

For all these and other everyday applications, you really don't need some big, heavy-duty cables. What you need is an eight-pack of 10-inch HDX Mini Bungee Cords that costs less than three bucks.

With enough stretch to create decent tension and hooks more than strong enough for all the aforementioned uses and then some, these bungees will quickly become must-have hardware in your kitchen, garage, laundry room, and beyond. 

If you need a longer cord, just hook a couple together and secure groceries in the car or strap a tarp down over the woodpile.

Just note that those metal hooks are not capped and will scratch delicate surfaces, so consider putting a bit of duct tape over the tips to protect wood, paint, or other such materials.

Pros: Amazing low price, a convenient size for many projects, good retention of elasticity

Cons: Metal hooks too small and prone to scratching surfaces

Buy an eight-pack of HDX Mini Bungee Cords at Home Depot for $2.87



The best carabiner

The secure clasps at each end of a Keeper Carabiner Bungee Cord ensure the cables won't become detached during use, helping keep your cargo in place even on a long, bumpy ride.

The best bungee cord in the world won't do you much good if it's lying on the road a hundred miles back, having popped off the rails of your roof rack when you hit that pothole on the onramp. Oh, bad news … your suitcase and skis are back there, too.

With a Keeper Carabiner Bungee Cord, that's not going to happen, because the hooks of a traditional bungee have been replaced with spring-loaded carabiners that only open with deliberately applied pressure.

The cords are 48-inches long, a perfect length for strapping down sizeable cargo in a truck bed or atop a roof, and the durable rubber core and UV-resistant jacket make these bungees suitable for regular use. The aluminum carabiners have a strong spring mechanism and a large plastic base that makes them easy to hold, a major plus as you strain to secure a bungee pulled taut over a large load.

You'll pay more for this specialized bungee cord than you would for most products of similar length, but each still costs less than five dollars. I a Keep Carabiner Bungee Cord helps prevent the loss of your stuff, that's money well spent indeed.

Just note that Home Depot has better prices than Amazon.

Pros: Design ensures cords stay in place, durable construction, comfortable grips below carabiners

Cons: Large carabiners can't fit in snug spaces

Buy a Keeper Carabiner Bungee Cord at Home Depot for $4.98



The best adjustable bungee cord

The fact that you can shorten or extend a Reese Secure Adjustable Flat Strap Bungee means you can get the perfect amount of tension every time.

Interestingly the best thing about a Reese Secure Adjustable Flat Strap Bungee isn't the fact that you can shorten the length of the cord to create more tension for a more secure tie-down, but that you can lengthen the cord to reduce tension when less pressure is needed. 

Because while you want maximum pressure when you're strapping down a pallet of roofing shingles or an ATV, you might not want to apply dozens of pounds of pressure to that antique end table you're moving across town for Great Aunt Hildegard.

The Reese Secure Adjustable Flat Strap Bungee solves the most common issue bungees present, which is actually a two-part problem: They always seem to be a bit too long or a bit too short. Sure, you can just loop the bungee around your roof rack or bike tube a few times before hooking it in place, but when you can change the length of the cord itself, you create the perfect amount of custom tension. 

These bungees can be shortened to as little as 10 inches in length all the way out to a full 48 inches. That makes them useful in the garage, with cars, trucks, and SUVs, and suitable for keeping tarps tied down over wood piles. 

Most customers love the flexibility the Reese Secure Adjustable Flat Bungee creates, and the cords have a stellar 4.7-star overall rating on Amazon, but one buyer did speak for a number of others when she said the "'adjusting' is way too complicated to be practical." Another customer spoke for most of the rest when he called the "light duty hooks" strong and reliable and called the bungees a "good value," saying he regularly uses them in a "truck to hold down bikes and other random stuff."

Pros: Adjustable from 10-inch to 48-inch lengths, wide shape adds strength, non-scratching hooks

Cons: Adjustment process can be annoying

Buy a pair of Reese Secure Adjustable Flat Strap bungee cords on Amazon for $5.05



What else we considered

The bungee cords on this list quite literally come in all shapes and sizes and are suitable for all sorts of different jobs, but they're hardly the only options out there.

  • Kotap Adjustable Bungee Cords ($11.95): Having used them myself for years, I was tempted to include Kotap's Adjustable Bungee Cords, which are cheap, with a 10-pack going for $11.95 on Amazon, but the plastic hooks will give out under enough tension, so use multiple hooks if you choose these for an important task.
  • ProGrip Stretch Lock Bungee Cords ($26.74): I was also tempted to feature ProGrip Stretch Lock Bungee Cords, which have a unique looped design, allowing you to slide a locking mechanism up and down the cord to make custom-tightened cinching. They're ideal for bundling together small tools, kindling, and the like, but not as true bungee cord suitable for strapping down a load.
  • S-Line Mini Bungee Cords ($8.50): For very low-cost bungees, you can try S-Line Mini Bungee Cords, which come 20 to an order that costs less than $8.50, but don't try securing any furniture with them.
  • Thegan LLC Bungee Cords ($27.99): And finally for the frugal and/or handy among you, consider making your own custom lengths of bungee cordage using Thegan LLCbungee cord, which comes in spools measuring either 50 or 100 feet, and in two different thicknesses. But you'll need your own hooks.


Many people incorrectly think that the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4 — here's the real reason the US celebrates that day

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US American woman United States Uncle Sam flag

In the US, Independence Day is all about getting decked out in red, white, and blue, throwing some meat on the barbecue, and shooting off fireworks.

That's just America's way of commemorating its founders' decision to rebel against King George III and declare their independence in 1776.

Representatives from the 13 colonies that would band together to form the US debated the breakaway from Britain over the course of a number of hot summer days in Philadelphia.

But, while the Fourth of July is currently the US's national holiday, the Declaration Independence was issued as an initial resolution on July 2.

On that day, Massachusetts delegate and future US president John Adams was certain that he'd witnessed history — and that the date would live on in memory.

"The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America," wrote Adams, in a July 3, 1776 letter to his wife, Abigail.

Adams ended up being off by two days. The Declaration went through some revisions and was finalized on July 4. But historians believe that the document wasn't signed until about a month later.

Read more: What the Founding Fathers were doing before their act of rebellion made them famous

Emily Sneff, research manager of the Declaration Resources Project at Harvard University, wrote that 49 of the 56 signers didn't even add their signatures to the declaration until August 2, 1776: "It took several months, if not years, for all of the signatures to be added."

She cited the Journals of the Continental Congress, which include this August 2 entry: "The declaration of independence being engrossed and compared at the table was signed."

So, why do we gather together to blow things up and overeat on the Fourth?

The Declaration was technically approved on that day, and the copies distributed throughout the colonies were dated July 4, 1776.

As a result, that was the date that stuck in people's minds.

SEE ALSO: 5 famous 'facts' about the Fourth of July that aren't true — and what actually happened instead

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Macy’s will set off 60,000 fireworks this 4th of July — here’s how they set it all up

The most expensive and affordable states to buy a house, ranked

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houses homes

  • Buying a house has become more expensive than ever: Home prices have increased significantly since the 1960s, when the median price of a home was less than $100,000 in today's dollars. 
  • Today, the median home listing price in the US is nearly $226,800, according to Zillow, but that varies by state.
  • We ranked the most affordable and most expensive places to buy a house according to median listing price.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

In today's housing market, where you may have to save for as long as twelve years to afford a down payment, buying a house is a big deal.

The cost of buying a home has increased significantly since the 1960s, when the median price of a home was $11,900, or $96,681, when adjusted for inflation, according to a Student Loan Hero report. Today, the median home listing price in the US is $226,800 according to Zillow

Read more:Here's the salary you'll need if you want to afford a mortgage in 17 major US cities

But that number can vary depending on where you buy a home. Using data from Zillow, we took a look at the median home listing price in every state, including Washington, DC. 

Coastal states, such as Massachusetts and California, comprised the majority of the top ten most expensive places to buy a home. Meanwhile, Southern and Midwestern states, such as Ohio, Mississippi, and Iowa, are the most affordable places to buy a house.

Below, see how much a typical house costs right now in every state, ranked from least to most expensive.

SEE ALSO: Here's how much it costs to rent a one-bedroom apartment in 15 major US cities

DON'T MISS: The salary you need to afford rent in every state, ranked

51. West Virginia

Median listing price: $166,488 

Median listing price per square foot: $98

 



50. Arkansas

Median listing price: $179,500

Median listing price per square foot: $101



49. Ohio

Median listing price: $179,900

Median listing price per square foot: $111



48. Iowa

Median listing price: $180,000

Median listing price per square foot: $130



47. Mississippi

Median listing price: $188,900

Median listing price per square foot: $96



46. Michigan

Median listing price: $191,000

Median listing price per square foot: $132



45. Oklahoma

Median listing price: $192,000

Median listing price per square foot: $106



44. Missouri

Median listing price: $192,500

Median listing price per square foot: $122



43. Indiana

Median listing price: $194,900

Median listing price per square foot: $108



42. Kentucky

Median listing price: $199,000 

Median listing price per square foot: $118



41. Kansas

Median listing price: $199,900

Median listing price per square foot: $126



40. Nebraska

Median listing price: $215,000

Median listing price per square foot: $140



T39. Louisiana

Median listing price: $219,900

Median listing price per square foot: $122



T39. Alabama

Median listing price: $219,900

Median listing price per square foot: $104



37. Wisconsin

Median listing price: $222,500 

Median listing price per square foot: $141



36. Pennsylvania

Median listing price: $224,990 

Median listing price per square foot: $136



35. South Dakota

Median listing price: $225,000

Median listing price per square foot: $169



34. North Dakota

Median listing price: $227,000

Median listing price per square foot: 150



33. New Mexico

Median listing price: $239,000

Median listing price per square foot: $137



32. Illinois

Median listing price: $248,900

Median listing price per square foot: $154



31. Maine

Median listing price: $250,000

Median listing price per square foot: $171



30. South Carolina

Median listing price: $252,900 

Median listing price per square foot: $131



29. Wyoming

Median listing price: $256,511

Median listing price per square foot: $171



28. Tennessee

Median listing price: $259,000

Median listing price per square foot: $135



27. Georgia

Median listing price: $265,000

Median listing price per square foot: $122

 



26. Vermont

Median listing price: $274,000

Median listing price per square foot: $159



25. North Carolina

Median listing price: $275,000

Median listing price per square foot: $135



24. Minnesota

Median listing price: $280,000 

Median listing price per square foot: $188



23. Texas

Median listing price: $283,499

Median listing price per square foot: $129



22. Alaska

Median listing price: $294,000

Median listing price per square foot: $172



21. Arizona

Median listing price: $295,000

Median listing price per square foot: $161



T20. Delaware

Median listing price: $299,000

Median listing price per square foot: $149



T20. Florida

Median listing price: $299,000

Median listing price per square foot: $167



18. New Hampshire

Median listing price: $309,900

Median listing price per square foot: $172



T17. Nevada

Median listing price: $320,000

Median listing price per square foot: $177



T17. Virginia

Median listing price: $320,000

Median listing price per square foot: $163



15. Rhode Island

Median listing price: $324,900

Median listing price per square foot: $210



T14. Idaho

Median listing price: $325,000

Median listing price per square foot: $170



T14. Montana

Median listing price: $325,000

Median listing price per square foot: $206



12. Connecticut

Median listing price: $327,950 

Median listing price per square foot: $175



11. Maryland

Median listing price: $329,989

Median listing price per square foot: $190



10. New Jersey

Median listing price: $342,000

Median listing price per square foot: $193



9. Utah

Median listing price: $369,900

Median listing price per square foot: $189



8. Oregon

Median listing price: $389,997

Median listing price per square foot: $221



T7. New York

Median listing price: $425,000

Median listing price per square foot: $205



T7. Washington

Median listing price: $425,000 

Median listing price per square foot: $242



5. Colorado

Median listing price: $429,800

Median listing price per square foot: $260



4. Massachusetts

Median listing price: $479,900 

Median listing price per square foot: $271



3. California

Median listing price: $549,900 

Median listing price per square foot: $324



2. Washington, DC

Median listing price: $599,000

Median listing price per square foot: $547



1. Hawaii

Median listing price: $635,000

Median listing price per square foot: $521



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