
In San Francisco, a Space for Working, Painting and Nesting
Lauren Geremia, a San Francisco interior designer, lives in a meticulously preserved 1930s Art Deco house. While she respects the building’s historic details, she has transformed the former dining room into a hybrid home office and art studio, featuring hand‑painted walls and curated décor. The space reflects her bohemian aesthetic and serves as a live‑in showcase for her design philosophy. Geremia’s approach balances heritage conservation with personal creative expression.
Aging May Be Reversible by Restoring Cellular Information
It’s not often that a theory about aging feels this transformative. I recently came across research suggesting that aging may not be permanent damage — but a loss of biological information inside our cells. Think of it like a scratched CD. The data...
Palantir CEO Alex Karp Bought a $46 Million Miami Mansion Just Before Buying $120 Million Colorado Monastery
Palantir chief executive Alex Karp bought a $46 million Miami Beach mansion in June, just months before Palantir announced its headquarters move to the city. He then secured the former St. Benedict’s Monastery in Snowmass, Colorado for $120 million, a $30 million discount that...

Book Review: ‘A Treacherous Secret Agent,’ by Marjorie Garber
Marjorie Garber’s new book *A Treacherous Secret Agent* examines how literature functioned as a covert form of resistance during the second Red Scare. By juxtaposing congressional hearings of Hallie Flanagan in 1938 and Joseph Papp in 1958 with the works of Shakespeare,...

The Hidden Cost of Dismissal: How We Amplify Chronic Pain in Clinical Settings
The article warns that clinicians’ subtle dismissive cues can unintentionally intensify chronic pain, emphasizing the biopsychosocial nature of suffering. It cites research showing social stress amplifies pain pathways and argues that overlooking patients’ psychosocial context leads to misdiagnosis and wasted...

Are Humans Degenerating Genetically and Getting Dumber as a Result?
Humans inherit roughly 100 new genetic mutations each generation, a rate that fuels ongoing debate about a potential decline in physical and mental fitness. Geneticist Michael Lynch warned that industrialized societies could see reduced fitness over centuries, while some studies...

Indika Forced Me to Confront some of Life's Toughest Questions, and I Think It's Made Me a Better Person
Indika, the latest release from indie developer Odd Meter, is a dark narrative‑driven game that intertwines puzzle‑platforming with retro arcade sequences while confronting religious hypocrisy and personal faith. Set in an Eastern Orthodox convent, the four‑hour experience follows a nun...

Enough Said by Alan Bennett Review – a Man for All Seasons
Alan Bennett’s new diary volume, covering 2016‑2024, revisits his pandemic entries and long‑standing reflections on aging, military service, and literary rivalries. The collection shows how his COVID‑era observations acquire fresh meaning now that the crisis has receded. Bennett also highlights...

The Peaky Blinders Film Is Pandering to These Populist Times – I Should Know, the Nazi in It Is My...
The new Peaky Blinders film *The Immortal Man* introduces a fictional British Nazi named John Beckett, a character that the author—who is the real John Beckett’s son—argues bears no resemblance to his father, a former Labour MP imprisoned by 1940. Beckett places the...

‘Lonesome Dove,’ ‘Brokeback Mountain’ and the Power of the Book Review in the Age Before Algorithms
The New York Times essay highlights how The Washington Post’s now‑defunct Book World once acted as a cultural engine, catapulting authors like Larry McMurtry and Annie Proulx into mainstream success. By delivering thoughtful, serendipitous criticism, the section shaped literary reputations long before algorithmic feeds...

Book Review: ‘Open Space,’ by David Ariosto
David Ariosto’s new book *Open Space* offers a front‑row view of the modern space race, featuring interviews with a host of private‑sector engineers, scientists and billionaires—though not the marquee figures Elon Musk or Jeff Bezos. The narrative celebrates humanity’s engineering...

Sacred Plate: At Ananda In The Himalayas Food Is A Healing Hero
Ananda in the Himalayas, a luxury wellness retreat founded by Ashok Khanna of the Oberoi lineage, blends Ayurvedic nutrition, yoga, and ancient Indian philosophy within a historic palace estate. Guests undergo a personalized dosha assessment that shapes their meals, emphasizing...

DS No4 E-Tense
DS Automobiles has introduced the No4 E‑Tense, an electric version of its best‑selling compact crossover, as part of a refreshed lineup aimed at revitalising the brand in Europe. The model sits on Stellantis' EMP2 platform with a 58.3 kWh battery delivering up...

AI and Publishing: FAQ for Writers
The article provides a comprehensive FAQ for writers on how U.S. copyright law treats AI‑assisted and AI‑generated works, outlining when authors can claim copyright and when they cannot. It explains recent court decisions on AI training fair use, highlighting split...

Nicolas Di Felice Exits Courrèges
Nicolas Di Felice is departing Courrèges after a five‑year stint that revitalized the historic Parisian label. His tenure featured reimagined Space‑Age silhouettes, immersive runway shows and techno‑infused brand events. Artémis, the Pinault family holding, is expanding Courrèges with new boutiques in Paris,...
1046| Pregnant on Boat in French Polynesia, Tahiti Hospital Birth After Stalled Labor at Birth Center, Positive Unmedicated 2nd Birth...
Margo McKirdy recounts two contrasting births: her first, conceived aboard a sailboat and delivered in Tahiti’s Tumu Ora birth house after a pregnancy spent sailing through French Polynesia, and her second, an unmedicated home birth in the United States that...
Knowledge-Aware Graph-Enhanced Transformer for Semantic Retrieval
Researchers introduced a knowledge‑aware framework that merges transformer‑based semantic encoding with graph‑structured reasoning for information retrieval. The system automatically builds a corpus‑level knowledge graph from entity relationships, generates dense embeddings via bi‑encoders with synonym expansion, and applies graph convolutional networks...
Clemastine Fumarate Activates Lipophagy to Promote Oligodendrocyte Progenitor Cells Differentiation and Remyelination in a Cuprizone-Induced Demyelination Model
Researchers discovered that clemastine fumarate activates lipophagy in oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), clearing lipid droplets that impede differentiation. In vitro, the drug enhanced OPC maturation and removed myelin debris, while in a cuprizone‑induced mouse model it restored myelin integrity and...

Quasi‐2D Chiral Perovskite Janus‐Structural Nanofiber Film With Tunable Spectrum and Energy‐Transfer‐Amplified Circularly Polarized Luminescence
Researchers have created a Janus‑type nanofiber film that couples chiral quasi‑2D perovskite nanosheets with achiral perovskite nanocrystals or dye molecules via efficient energy transfer. This architecture raises the photoluminescence quantum yield of the achiral component by four times and pushes...
Trump's Brand Expands Across GCC Amid Iran Tensions
With the Iran conflict now in its 4th week, an important angle worth noting: President Trump’s family business (Trump Organization) has substantial licensing deals across the GCC - Trump Towers, hotels & golf resorts in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar & Oman,...
The Functional Variance Hypothesis: A Mathematical Framework for Stochastic Buffering, Optimal Helper Ratios, and a Proposed Epigenetic Calibration Mechanism in...
The new Functional Variance Hypothesis (FVH) argues that non‑reproductive helpers act primarily as stochastic buffers against rare, high‑lethality environmental crises rather than as growth enhancers. Using a nonlinear persistence model, the authors derive a unique stable optimal helper ratio that...

Extra 11 Minutes’ Sleep Each Night Can Reduce Heart Attack Risk, Study Finds
A new study of more than 53,000 UK adults shows that modest lifestyle tweaks—adding just 11 minutes of sleep, 4.5 minutes of brisk walking and 50 g of extra vegetables each day—can lower the risk of heart attacks and strokes by...

Larry Clark and James Gilroy’s Advice for Young Artists
Larry Clark and James Gilroy have released "Bedtime Stories for Bad Boys and Girls," a new book and accompanying exhibition that delves into unsettling childhood vignettes through stark photography. The project, rooted in their 1970s New York partnership, mixes themes...

Can Black Soldier Fly Larvae Tackle the Manure and Antibiotic Resistance Problems in Our Food System?
Researchers are exploring black soldier fly (BSF) larvae as a dual solution for the massive manure surplus and rising antibiotic‑resistance threats in U.S. livestock production. The United States generates roughly 941 billion pounds of manure each year, overwhelming traditional disposal methods...

WHO Recommends New Diagnostic Tools to Help End TB
On World TB Day, the World Health Organization issued new guidelines urging countries to adopt point‑of‑care tuberculosis diagnostic tools and tongue‑swab sampling. The portable tests cost less than half of existing molecular platforms and deliver results in under an hour,...
Luxury Group by Marriott International Unveils “Art of Arrival,”
Marriott International’s Luxury Group has launched “Art of Arrival,” an artist‑residency program featuring emerging Chinese creator Chen Zuo. The inaugural residency at The Ritz‑Carlton Suzhou produced a new commission that will debut during Hong Kong Art Month, then travel to Art Basel...
Watch Flea Cover Frank Ocean’s ‘Thinkin Bout You’ on ‘Fallon’
Flea appeared on The Tonight Show to perform a jazz‑infused cover of Frank Ocean’s “Thinkin Bout You,” showcasing both bass and trumpet alongside a live orchestra. The performance promotes his debut solo album Honora, slated for release on March 27, which...
Organizational Behavior Expert Makes The Case For A “Meeting Doomsday”
Organizational behavior specialist Rebecca Hinds argues that meetings persist because they are visible, not because they add value, creating a "visibility bias" that inflates calendar time. She labels the accumulated, low‑value schedule as "meeting debt" and proposes a "Meeting Doomsday"...
Differentially Private Lasso: An ISTA Framework with Finite-Iteration Guarantees
The paper introduces an Iterative Shrinkage‑Thresholding Algorithm (ISTA) framework for differentially private (DP) Lasso regression in high‑dimensional sparse settings. It delivers finite‑iteration, high‑probability ℓ₂ error bounds that separate a non‑private baseline, a privacy‑induced noise term, and a vanishing optimization residual....
James Gunn's Superman Respects Roots, Franchise at Risk
Finally saw @jamesgunn ‘s Superman and let me just say it’s a relief to see a director who understands the source material & writers who understand the characters. Every one was spot on and kudos to the actors for breathing...

TFL and Gluteus Medius Leverage Peaks at Joint Extremes
With a straight leg, hip abduction moment arms alter over the joint angle range of motion such that the TFL and gluteus medius have best leverages at either end. https://t.co/d43ErC08BZ

Taiwan Mandopop Star Jay Chou Returns with Ambitious New Album
Taiwanese Mandopop icon Jay Chou is set to release his first album in nearly four years, Children of the Sun, his 16th studio record featuring 13 tracks. The digital launch arrives on Wednesday, with a physical edition slated for April,...

Essential Reading for Modern Leaders: Logic, Ethics, Growth
The Modern Leader’s Reading List: Logic, Ethics, and Exponential Growth by @Timothy_Hughes https://t.co/OcyJIbvFk0 @DLAIgnite #SocialSelling #DigitalSelling #Sales #Marketing #Leadership #Books #Strategy #Culture #Reading #ArtificialIntelligence #AgenticAI https://t.co/xvZTtxzhCf

Hybe India Announces Nationwide Search for ‘The Next Generation of Artists’
Hybe India announced its first nationwide audition program, seeking vocal, rap and dance talent through online submissions and in‑person events across ten major cities. The initiative follows the launch of Hybe India in Mumbai in September 2025 and the recent...
Dietary Fructo-Oligosaccharides Dose-Dependently Modulate the Microbiome and Suppress Type 2 Lung Inflammation in a Murine Model of House Dust Mite-Induced...
Researchers fed BALB/c mice diets containing 1 %, 2.5 %, 5 %, or 10 % fructo‑oligosaccharides (FOS) before and during house‑dust‑mite sensitisation. While overall eosinophil recruitment to the lungs was unchanged, FOS dose‑dependently lowered lung Th2 cell frequencies and reduced key type 2 cytokines such...
Intestinal Mucosal Barrier Injury: Insights From Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Therapeutic Approaches
A new review in Frontiers in Nutrition (published March 24 2026) synthesizes interdisciplinary research on intestinal mucosal barrier injury, integrating perspectives from Traditional Chinese Medicine, nutrition, environmental science, psychology, genetics and food science. It maps the barrier’s mechanical, chemical, biological and immune...
Divergent Pathways of Mango Fractions in Promoting Metabolic Health: From Gut Microbiota Remodeling to Direct Systemic Regulation
The study compared mango pulp, peel, and kernel in mice using 16S rRNA sequencing and fecal metabolomics. Pulp and peel primarily reshaped gut microbiota—pulp enriched Bilophila, peel enriched Staphylococcus—altering fecal peptide and lipid metabolism. Kernel acted largely independent of the...

A Timely and Excellent New Book, Adapt, Designing New Lives for Old Buildings. Free to New TFE Members
The Fifth Estate is offering five free copies of the new book *Adapt, Designing New Lives for Old Buildings* to its next five new members. The book retails for $84.99 AUD (approximately $56 USD). Authors Hannah Lewi and Cameron Logan introduce a...
Discovery of Anti-Inflammatory Agents From Oreorchis Patens, a Medicinal and Edible Plant: Mechanistic Insights and Potential Therapeutic Applications
Researchers identified six phenanthrene derivatives from the edible pseudobulbs of Oreorchis patens, a traditional food‑and‑medicine plant. Among them, phenanthrene dimer 3 showed strong anti‑inflammatory activity in LPS‑stimulated macrophages by directly binding to the allosteric ADaM site of AMPK and preventing...
Association of Lipid Parameters with the Development of Disease Complications in Patients with Limited Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis: A Prospective Exploratory...
A prospective cohort of 38 limited cutaneous systemic sclerosis (lcSSc) patients and matched controls revealed a modestly pro‑atherogenic lipid profile in lcSSc, characterized by lower HDL levels and particles, higher triglycerides, and elevated triglycerides/HDL ratio and atherogenic index. NMR‑based analysis...

1027. Luke Kennard
In this episode of The Other People Show, host Brad Listie talks with acclaimed poet‑novelist Luke Kennard about his new novel Black Bag, a darkly comic story of a 37‑year‑old actor who volunteers for a university psychology experiment that requires him...
Burden of Colon and Rectum Cancer Attributable to a Diet High in Red Meat in the United States, 1990–2021
A new analysis of Global Burden of Disease 2021 data estimates that 12,053 colorectal cancer deaths in the United States in 2021 were attributable to a diet high in red meat. Age‑standardized mortality and DALY rates have declined modestly since...
Comparative Associations of Three Nutritional Indices with Hematoma Expansion After Intracerebral Hemorrhage
A retrospective cohort of 349 intracerebral hemorrhage patients examined three admission‑based nutritional indices—Prognostic Nutritional Index (PNI), Triglycerides × Total Cholesterol × Body Weight Index (TCBI), and Controlling Nutritional Status (CONUT) score—to assess their relationship with hematoma expansion (HE). Twelve percent of patients experienced HE,...

Got Moss on Your Roof? Experts Reveal Why It Could a Bigger Problem than It Looks
Moss on a roof does more than look unsightly; it acts like a sponge, retaining water that weakens tiles, compromises thermal integrity, and raises heating costs. While minor growth on newer roofs can be tackled with a soft brush and...

In an Ohio Apple Grove, Researchers Race to Save Rare Varieties
In 2004‑05 Diane Miller collected wild apple seeds from Kyrgyzstan and planted them at Ohio’s Dawes Arboretum, creating a 15‑acre, 800‑tree repository of thousands of genetic lines. The collection offers disease‑resistant traits that could reduce pesticide use and broaden flavor...
Alterations in Whole-Brain White Matter Structural Network Among Females with Abdominal Obesity by Appetite Subtypes
Researchers used diffusion tensor imaging to map whole‑brain white‑matter networks in 60 women with abdominal obesity, dividing them into strong‑appetite (SA) and moderate‑appetite (MA) subgroups and comparing them with 30 healthy controls. Both patient groups retained small‑world network organization, but...

An Ancient Shockwave
Astronomers have imaged supernova remnant SNR G206.9+2.3, the leftover of a star that exploded in the Monoceros constellation about 7,000 light‑years from Earth. The nebula stretches roughly 50 arcminutes—larger than the full Moon—and displays delicate, nested shells created by the blast wave...

Extreme Blast of Arctic Air From Polar Vortex Paints a Picturesque Plume Off Florida Coast — Earth From Space
A February 3, 2026 Terra satellite image revealed a 150‑mile‑long plume of calcium‑carbonate‑rich mud off Florida’s West Shelf, stirred up by an extreme Arctic blast that pushed a polar vortex southward. The frigid air generated strong winds and dense, cold...