Swedish Meteor – Meteor
Swedish Meteor, a Gothenburg‑based synth project, has released its 2026 album “Phased & Confused.” The record channels 1980s electronic pioneers such as Jean‑Michel Jarre and Public Service Broadcasting, delivering high‑tempo, space‑age synth textures. Critics praised its warp‑speed energy and nostalgic sound design. The album is available via Bandcamp and promoted through social channels.

For A Flavor-Packed Prime Rib, Use This Cooking Method (Not Your Oven)
Using a smoker instead of a conventional oven can transform prime rib with a deep, smoky profile while preserving its tenderness. The method recommends low‑and‑slow cooking, preferably with a charcoal‑dominant fuel mix to moderate smoke intensity, and wrapping in foil...
‘It Has Nothing to Do with Michelangelo’: Expert Wades in on Painting Newly Attributed to Renaissance Master
Belgian art historian Michel Draguet has announced a newly discovered painting he claims is a late work by Michelangelo, naming it the Spirituali Pietà and dating it to the 1540s. The attribution relies on two monograms resembling Michelangelo’s signature, 16th‑century pigment...

A Holiday in the Isolated Faroe Islands Is the Perfect Solution to Overtourism – for Now
The Faroe Islands, a remote Danish archipelago of 18 volcanic islands, are experiencing a surge in visitors as overtourism pressures mainland Europe. Despite being only a two‑hour flight from London, the islands remain largely unknown, offering unspoiled landscapes, 23 inter‑island...
Yttrium-Doped Nickel Catalyst Boosts Ammonia to Hydrogen Conversion Efficiency
Researchers at Tohoku University have created a yttrium‑doped nickel‑ceria catalyst (Ni₁Ce₁₋ₓYₓOα) that dramatically improves ammonia decomposition into hydrogen. The yttrium addition generates stable surface oxygen vacancies and tunes the electronic structure around nickel sites, lowering reaction energy barriers. The optimized...
MXenes Move Closer to Real World Use in Energy Storage and Medicine
A Swiss research initiative, TailorX, has advanced the synthesis, modeling, and sustainable production of MXenes, a versatile class of 2‑D transition‑metal carbides and nitrides. The team built a high‑purity library of MAX‑phase precursors, deployed AI models to predict MXene structures...
Rethinking Endocrine Therapy in ER-Positive Breast Cancer
Dr. Steven Quay, CEO of Atossa Therapeutics, highlighted a new focus on tolerability and prevention in estrogen‑receptor‑positive breast cancer, where five‑year survival now exceeds 90%. Atossa is developing a next‑generation SERM that aims to reduce side‑effects while maintaining efficacy and...

Tara Clerkin Trio Detail New Album, ‘Somewhere Good’
The Bristol‑based Tara Clerkin Trio announced their new eight‑track album, Somewhere Good, slated for release on 5 June 2026. It follows their critically praised 2023 mini‑album On The Turning Ground and will be available digitally, on CD, and on vinyl. A limited‑edition...

Rethinking 'the One': How the Soulmate Script Distorts Romance
The article challenges the pervasive "soulmate" script, showing that belief in a perfect "one" distorts expectations and undermines relationship effort. Research cited—including a YouGov poll where 60% of Americans endorse soulmates and longitudinal studies on destiny versus growth beliefs—demonstrates that...
The Strategy of Clarity: How to Make Sure Your Habits Match Your Goals
Self‑help author Gretchen Rubin emphasizes the Strategy of Clarity as essential for aligning habits with goals. She argues that vague intentions cause paralysis, while precise, value‑driven actions boost consistency. Rubin outlines three steps: define specific goals, uncover the personal “why,”...

Andrew Scott's "Irresistible" Real-Life Drama with Imelda Staunton Is Now Streaming on the BBC
The 2014 film "Pride," starring Andrew Scott and Imelda Staunton, is now streaming on BBC iPlayer for a limited month. The movie dramatizes the 1984 Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM) movement, which forged an unlikely alliance with striking...

Your Employees Aren’t Lazy, They’re Afraid
Employees often appear lazy or resistant, but neuroscience shows they’re actually in threat mode due to change fatigue. The amygdala treats reorganizations, AI rollouts, or new leadership as physical danger, shutting down the pre‑frontal cortex and narrowing focus. Gallup’s 2025...
Injectable Mini-Livers as an Alternative to Liver Regeneration
Researchers have introduced INSITE, an injectable platform that combines primary human hepatocytes with hydrogel microspheres to form self‑assembling, vascularizable tissue ensembles in situ. Using ultrasound guidance, the scaffold is delivered to an ectopic site where it integrates with host vasculature...
Healing Isn’t Enough—Trust Your Body Again
One of my athletes is returning to sport after injury and had a very vulnerable moment with me today. He knows his body is healed but he doesn’t know if he trusts it yet. Returning from injury doesn’t just require...
War Deepens Iran's Water Crisis Amid Climate Change
War is pushing Iran deeper into a water crisis, compounding the effects of climate change and decades of mismanagement by authorities https://t.co/810aKlEkkp
Must Love Pets: Romance Novels with the Best Animal Characters
The article spotlights romance novels that elevate their stories with memorable animal characters, ranging from dogs and cats to fantastical baby dragons. It highlights five titles—*The Re‑Do List*, *Get a Life, Chloe Brown*, *Alice Rue Evades the Truth*, *The Baby...

Tiaras Make a Comeback: Modern Women Embrace Royal Glamour
Are we seeing a return of the tiara? I loved writing this piece for Iconic Magazine, the official publication of Iconic Hotels & Resorts on historic tiaras and how women are buying and wearing tiaras today. https://t.co/3AfUIkZh81
Pray Everything, Live Briefly, Seek a Meaningful Legacy
In this little life of ours, for the few days God has allowed us to live, pray about anything and everything. Tell it all to God, you are safer that way. We will all leave this earth someday, but when you...

Author Spotlight: Matthew Kressel
Matthew Kressel, featured in Lightspeed Magazine’s March 2026 issue, discusses how his short story “Espie Droger Dreams of War” emerged from anger over the fictional DOGE crisis that destabilized U.S. institutions. He explains his writing process—sometimes subconscious, sometimes meticulously planned—and how...
FAST‐CRISPR: Fusogenic Association and Secured Transfection of CRISPR/Cas9 Ribonucleoproteins Using Lipid‐Silica Hybrid Nanoparticles for Therapeutic Genome Editing
Researchers introduced FAST‑CRISPR, a lipid‑silica hybrid nanoparticle that fuses directly with cell membranes to deliver CRISPR/Cas9 ribonucleoproteins. By combining a 1:1 weight ratio of cationic DOTAP and ionizable DODMA lipids with large‑pore silica cores, the platform achieves high RNP loading...
Emerging Atomically Engineered RuNi‐Zn‐ZIF‐8 Catalyst for Remarkably High Electrocatalytic Nitrate Reduction to Ammonia and Electrocatalytic Oxygen Evolution Reaction
Researchers have engineered a RuZn‑based carbon‑nitrogen framework decorated with atomically dispersed nickel and minor Ni clusters, creating a bifunctional electrocatalyst for nitrate reduction to ammonia and oxygen evolution. The catalyst delivers an ammonia yield of 10,199 µg h⁻¹ mg⁻¹ cat with 84% Faradaic...
A Red Brick‐Derived Fe2P‐Based Cocatalyst Sheet Enables Monolithic Photocatalysts for Efficient Solar Hydrogen Production
Researchers have converted common red brick into a Fe2P‑based cocatalyst sheet that serves as a scaffold for semiconductor particles, creating monolithic photocatalysts for solar water splitting. The CdS‑Fe2P/RB monolith delivers a visible‑light hydrogen evolution rate of 7.7 mmol g⁻¹ h⁻¹ and an apparent...
A Balloon Electrochemical Sensor for Conformal Interfacing With Intestinal Wall and Real‐Time Monitoring of Serotonin Release
Researchers have created a balloon‑shaped electrochemical sensor using gold nanotubes that expands to conform to the soft curvature of the intestinal lumen. The device is inserted endoluminally, inflates to mimic physiological distension, and records real‑time serotonin (5‑HT) release from the...
FAST‐CRISPR: Fusogenic Association and Secured Transfection of CRISPR/Cas9 Ribonucleoproteins Using Lipid‐Silica Hybrid Nanoparticles for Therapeutic Genome Editing (Small 15/2026)
Researchers at UNIST and collaborators introduced FAST‑CRISPR, a lipid‑silica hybrid nanoparticle system designed to ferry CRISPR/Cas9 ribonucleoproteins into cells. The platform leverages a fusogenic lipid coating that promotes rapid endosomal escape, securing high‑efficiency genome editing while preserving RNP integrity. Preclinical...
Iron Incorporation‐Induced Phosphorus Vacancies in MoP: A Dual‐Functional Strategy Toward Efficient Solar Driven Hydrogen Production
Researchers introduced iron atoms into molybdenum phosphide (MoP) to generate phosphorus vacancies, forming a dual‑functional catalyst for solar‑driven hydrogen production. The Fe substitution replaces Mo sites, creating electron‑trapping vacancies while Mo atoms serve as hole traps, markedly improving charge separation....
Mechanically Responsive Microwave Absorption and Shielding in Hierarchical Heterogeneous Architectures for Electromagnetic Interference Protection
Researchers have created a mechanically responsive composite (FPCEL) that combines Fe3O4‑functionalized cellulose nanofibers, polypyrrole, liquid metal, and Ecoflex silicone. The hierarchical, asymmetric architecture yields strain‑dependent microwave absorption and shielding, shifting from reflection‑dominated to absorption‑enhanced behavior as the material is stretched...
Formation Mechanism of BN Flakes on MWCNTs
Researchers have developed a CVD method to coat multi‑wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) with hexagonal boron nitride (h‑BN) flakes, creating a three‑layer heterostructure of CNT core, coaxial BN nanotubes, and outer BN flakes. Experiments and molecular dynamics simulations reveal a two‑step...
What Is Electronic Music?
An archival BBC video from 1969 revisits the birth of electronic music at the Radiophonic Workshop, the unit established in 1958 to produce sound effects and experimental compositions. The footage features interviews with pioneers like Daphne Oram, who demonstrate the hands‑on...

How Does the Body Detect Physical Force?
Scientists at Scripps Research used MINFLUX super‑resolution microscopy to reveal why the ion channel PIEZO2 is uniquely tuned for light touch. They discovered that PIEZO2 is intrinsically stiffer than its sibling PIEZO1 and is physically tethered to the actin cytoskeleton...
The Bystander Effect Applies to Virtual Agents, New Psychology Research Shows
A new study in Consciousness and Cognition shows that working alongside a virtual AI partner reduces people’s explicit sense of control while simultaneously boosting their unconscious sense of agency, measured via temporal binding. In two online experiments participants either acted...
Fortified Salad Packs a Healthy Punch to Meet a Growing Vitamin B12 Need
A research‑industry partnership has used aeroponic indoor farming to fortify pea shoots with vitamin B12, delivering the full recommended daily allowance in a 15‑gram serving. The fortified shoots maintain B12 stability during cold storage and are bioavailable in simulated digestion tests....

Long-Term Neurodevelopment Effects of Antenatal COVID-19
A new longitudinal study finds that children born to mothers infected with COVID-19 during pregnancy exhibit measurable neurodevelopmental deficits. Brain scans at two years reveal reduced cortical thickness and lower IQ scores compared with unexposed peers. The research, spanning over...

What Happens in the Brain When We Improvise
Recent neuroscience research shows that improvisation quiets the brain’s inner critic while activating networks tied to exploration, play, and reward. Studies with musicians and children reveal reduced default‑mode activity and heightened dopamine release during spontaneous creation. The concept of a...

Asian Film Awards 2026: Zhang Ziyi, Liu Haoran and Terrance Lau to Receive Special Honors
The Asian Film Awards Academy announced three special honors for its 19th ceremony, slated for March 15, 2026 at Hong Kong's Xiqu Centre. Veteran actress Zhang Ziyi will receive the Excellence in Asian Cinema Award for her decades‑long impact on...
Celebrate St. Patrick's Day at L.A.'s Best Irish Pubs
The piece chronicles Los Angeles’ Irish‑pub lineage, beginning with Tom Bergin’s 1936 Old Horseshoe Tavern, later renamed and relocated. Bergin’s claims to have introduced Irish coffee to the United States and holds the city’s second‑oldest liquor license. Today the tradition has...
“The Art of Living in Avant-Garde Paris”: A Playlist by Rachel Silveri
Rachel Silveri, an assistant professor at the University of Florida, has released *The Art of Living in Avant‑Garde Paris*, a new monograph that examines how interwar Paris artists wove creative practice into everyday life. The book is paired with a...

Moving CAR-T Beyond Oncology
Researchers are expanding CAR‑T cell therapy beyond cancer to treat autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. Sail Biomedicine’s chief products and operations officer highlighted on the Pharmaceutical Executive podcast that the company has pivoted to RNA‑based CAR‑T platforms,...

The 5 Best Island Getaways To Visit On America's Great Lakes, According To Research
America’s Great Lakes host over 32,000 islands, but five stand out as premier getaways. The list features Isle Royale in Lake Superior, Beaver Island in Lake Michigan, Mackinac Island also in Michigan, Kelleys Island in Lake Erie, and Wellesley Island near...
How to Reconnect with Your Inner Child
The article explains the inner‑child metaphor as a psychodynamic tool for uncovering early emotional imprints that drive adult reactions such as anger, fear of abandonment, and self‑criticism. It outlines three phases—recognition, in‑the‑moment management, and long‑term healing—using concrete techniques like naming...

Feeling Anxious? These Tips Might Help
The BBC Science Features team outlines nine science‑backed strategies to help people manage anxiety and build resilience during turbulent times. Techniques include emotional granularity, reframing anxiety as motivation, constructive worry, bibliotherapy, and even watching horror films. The article also highlights...
T Kira Madden on WHIDBEY
In this episode of Poured Over, author T. Cara Madden discusses her debut novel WHIDBEY, which follows three women—two adult survivors of a convicted child‑sex abuser and the abuser’s mother—after the abuser is murdered. Madden explains how the story emerged from...

Two Playwrights Tackle Father Figures
Two recent New York theater productions revisit father figures in unconventional ways. Clare Barron's revived “You Got Older” at Cherry Lane, under A24’s management, depicts a tender, realistic bond between an adult daughter and her ailing father, highlighted by Peter...

Early Life Probiotics May Support Gut and Immune Development, Study Suggests
A randomized controlled trial of 119 infants showed that daily supplementation with Bifidobacterium infantis YLGB‑1496 for 12 weeks markedly improved gastrointestinal health, reducing stomach aches, diarrhea episodes, and related clinic visits. The probiotic also sustained higher fecal sIgA levels and...
Smart, Hard Training Beats Injury‑Prevention Exercises in Golf
Golfers often train neither smart nor hard. Golf fitness and its ‘injury prevention’ frame has a lot to answer for. Often repurposed rehab. ‘Injury prevention exercises’ are often not performance enhancing but performance enhancing training is often injury preventing.
Best of Both Worlds Podcast: Understanding the Mattering Instinct with Philosopher Rebecca Goldstein
Best of Both Worlds podcast released its first philosopher interview, featuring Rebecca Newberger Goldstein. Goldstein discusses her research on the “mattering instinct,” explaining why humans instinctively seek significance in personal and professional realms. She references her book, *The Mattering Instinct*,...

On the Power of Maia Kobabe’s Gender Queer, One of the Most Banned Books of Its Era
Maia Kobabe’s graphic memoir *Gender Queer*, first published in 2019, has become a cultural flashpoint, topping the American Library Association’s list of most challenged books from 2021 to 2023 and ranking second in 2024. The memoir chronicles Kobabe’s non‑binary journey,...

On Lio Min’s Beating Heart Baby as “Portable Fortress of Dreams”
Lio Min’s debut novel *Beating Heart Baby* follows Santi, a queer Filipino high‑school senior, as he navigates love with Suwa, a trans‑masculine Korean‑American trumpet star, within a vibrant Los Angeles marching band. The story shifts to Tokyo, where Suwa performs in...

On the Pure Pleasure of Plot in Gretchen Felker-Martin’s Manhunt
Gretchen Felker‑Martin’s horror novel *Manhunt* has emerged as a breakout work that re‑centers plot and visceral storytelling in a literary market dominated by experimental autofiction. The book situates itself within the “gender apocalypse” subgenre, but flips the script by foregrounding...
The Fortunes (2016), by Peter Ho Davies
Peter Ho Davies' 2016 novel The Fortunes reimagines American history through four interwoven Chinese‑American lives, spanning from 19th‑century railroad labor to a modern adoption story. The book blends fact and fiction, drawing on real figures such as a Chinese film...

DNA of Authoritarianism | Interview with Anne Applebaum on Her Book Autocracy, Inc.
Anne Applebaum’s new book Autocracy, Inc. maps how authoritarian regimes—Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and formerly Venezuela—collaborate by sharing surveillance tech and financial tactics to sustain power. She argues these practices, from internet control to offshore money laundering, transcend ideology...