The Undone Is Done Again
Tanya Donelly and Chris Brokaw have issued a four‑song EP, *The Undone is Done Again*, on yellow vinyl for Record Store Day 2026. The release diverges sharply from their alternative‑rock pedigrees, presenting medieval folk material performed in Latin and archaic English. Donelly’s airy vocals intertwine with Brokaw’s hypnotic guitar, creating a haunting, ritualistic soundscape across tracks like “Sainte Nicholaes” and “Plaudat Letitia.” The project has earned a 7/10 rating from Under the Radar, signaling strong critical reception for its experimental ambition.

The Dogs In the Shed
Leadership expert uses dog‑breed metaphors to illustrate that employees thrive when placed in roles that match their innate strengths. The article argues managers should stop trying to fix mismatched talent and instead focus on identifying and releasing individuals into positions...

Primestar Group Adds Luxury Brand June Lux to Portfolio
Primestar Group has launched June Lux, its first luxury‑focused brand, expanding the June Hotels portfolio beyond boutique, extended‑stay and coworking concepts. The new brand embeds proprietary technology such as WhatsApp‑based check‑in and an AI‑powered digital concierge to deliver a fully digital...
Cellular Senescence and Mitochondrial Dysfunction and the Aging of the Vascular Endothelium
The review links cellular senescence and mitochondrial dysfunction to the aging of the vascular endothelium, showing how reduced nitric‑oxide, oxidative stress, and chronic inflammation drive atherosclerosis, hypertension, and blood‑brain barrier leakage. It details a feedback loop where mitochondrial bioenergetic decline...

Weekly Listening: April 2026 #2
The April 2026 Weekly Listening roundup spotlights a wave of indie releases, from Big Bluestem’s debut folk single “Take Care, Stay Warm” to Deer Tick’s forthcoming album Coin‑O‑Matic. Blue Bayou’s new EP The Carousel and Hockitay’s visually striking “buttons” illustrate the...
Homoharringtonine as a Senotherapeutic Drug
Researchers used a large‑scale drug‑repositioning screen to identify homoharringtonine (HHT), an FDA‑approved anti‑leukemic agent, as a potent senotherapeutic. In vitro, HHT selectively eliminated senescent pre‑adipocytes while sparing healthy cells. In male mice, HHT cleared senescent adipocytes, restored white‑adipose tissue function,...

10 Hard Rules Of Life According to Charlie Munger
Charlie Munger, Berkshire Hathaway’s vice chairman, distilled his lifelong investing discipline into ten hard rules that stress inversion, staying within one’s circle of competence, challenging personal biases, and treating rationality as a moral duty. He warns against toxic relationships, advocates...

5 Common Habits That Make People Lose Respect For You, According to Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett outlines five everyday habits that erode respect, from neglecting integrity in small moments to surrounding yourself with the wrong people. He stresses that reputation is built on consistent, honest actions rather than grand gestures. The billionaire investor links...

10 Things You Can Declutter in the Next 10 Minutes
The article outlines ten quick‑win decluttering tasks that can be completed in ten minutes, ranging from removing expired medicines to clearing a car’s interior. Each suggestion is designed to produce an immediate sense of control, reduce visual noise, and trigger...

Color Code Performance Series
The artist’s new "Color‑Code Performance Series" extends the ongoing "Lost Grids" project by embedding semantic text directly into an image’s digital code, producing deliberate visual glitches. These glitches are amplified into prints, artist books, and now video installations that pair...

Post-Rock Double Bill? And So I Watch You From Afar and Caspian for Dublin Show
Irish post‑rock stalwarts And So I Watch You From Afar and Massachusetts‑based Caspian will co‑headline a double‑bill at Dublin’s Opium venue on Friday, 30 October 2026, with Irish act Otay:Onii as special guests. The concert marks a rare convergence of two long‑standing...

The Discipline of Silence (Wilderness Warrior)
The devotional "The Discipline of Silence" urges readers to embrace stillness as a spiritual practice rather than a sign of weakness. It argues that quiet moments in the wilderness strip away external noise, exposing hidden anxieties and fostering deeper communion...
What Can a CI Director Do When Executives Undermine Psychological Safety?
Continuous improvement (CI) directors often confront senior leaders whose blame‑oriented habits erode psychological safety. The article explains why coaching resistant executives is difficult—habitual power dynamics, lack of self‑awareness, and systemic incentives reinforce toxic behavior. It offers pragmatic tactics such as...

DJ JM – Rat Race
Fever AM celebrates nearly a decade as one of electronic music’s most influential labels, despite its loose definition of techno. Founders Mor Elian and Rhyw have built a reputation for curating artists who blur genre lines, drawing talent like Ayesha, Xen Chron, and...

Madra Salach Add Final Dublin Show Tonight
Madra Salach, the Dublin‑based alternative folk sextet, announced a third Dublin concert for tonight at The Workman's Club, adding it just hours before tickets go on sale at 11 am. The two earlier Dublin shows are already sold out, underscoring the...

When Did Opera Stop Being Welsh?
Eighty years ago the Welsh National Opera launched with an all‑Welsh cast, three Welsh conductors and a venue named the Prince of Wales Theatre. Today the company is battling a severe financial crunch, having slashed its chorus from 120 singers...
The Crawling Eye – In My Head
Indie band The Crawling Eye released the single “In My Head” in 2026, delivering a surf‑inflected, dreamy shuffle reminiscent of the Beach Boys. The track pairs soft vocal delivery with upbeat, positive lyrics, creating a feel‑good listening experience. Distributed via...

The Rushford Times - A Weekly Newsletter From Jodi Taylor
Jodi Taylor’s weekly newsletter, The Rushford Times, continues its split‑schedule—Wednesdays for paid members and Fridays for free readers. This edition spotlights a new book recommendation, The Terror of Tannery Lane by MRC Kasasian, and announces the paperback launch of Out of Time on April 23, 2026. A...
Watch: AI and Preventative Health Webinar
Health Tech World and Femtech World hosted a webinar featuring four industry leaders discussing how artificial intelligence is transforming preventative health. The panel covered AI‑driven early disease detection, personalized lifestyle recommendations, and the specific implications for women’s health innovation. Recorded...

What We Owe Our Descendants
Sharon reflects on Rahaf Harfoush’s essay urging a mindset that values work for future generations, even if we won’t see its outcomes. She argues that today’s converging crises—demographic shifts, geopolitical realignment, AI, climate feedback loops, and social decay—constitute a civilizational...
How Compassion Changed My Writing
Anne E. Beall, Ph.D., recounts how embracing compassion for her mother, herself, and her inner critic transformed her writing. By reframing her mother from a villain to a nuanced human, previously rejected memoir pieces were accepted by literary journals. Extending...

Everything You Need to Know About ‘Toaster’: Netflix India’s New Dark Comedy
Rajkummar Rao has launched his production company Kampa Film and partnered with Netflix India for its maiden project, the Hindi dark comedy *Toaster*. The film, starring Rao and Sanya Malhotra, marks the feature‑directorial debut of Vivek Daschaudhary and follows a...

Overcoming AI Brain Fry - Part I
The post likens today’s AI‑driven knowledge work to 19th‑century telephone switchboard operators, highlighting how juggling multiple large‑language models can cause rapid cognitive fatigue, dubbed “brain fry.” It references Emma Nutt, the first switchboard operator, as a historical parallel to modern...

Critical Thinking Is Harder Than You Think
The post argues that critical thinking is harder than most realize because people instinctively scrutinize information that challenges their beliefs while letting confirming data pass unchecked. It highlights how modern algorithms amplify this bias, creating echo chambers that reinforce unexamined...

Researchers Embed Working Strain Sensors In LPBF Titanium
Researchers at Argonne National Laboratory, UCL and the University of Sheffield have demonstrated a viable method to embed multilayer strain sensors directly into Ti‑6Al‑4V parts produced by laser powder‑bed fusion (LPBF). The approach combines direct‑ink‑writing of silver nanoparticle traces on...

Toxic Dust From the Shrinking Salton Sea Is Harming Children’s Lung Growth Amid Water Loss, Study Finds
The Salton Sea’s rapid shrinkage is exposing toxic, chemical‑laden dust that is now entering the lungs of Imperial Valley children. A longitudinal study by USC and UC‑Irvine of more than 700 elementary‑age participants shows measurable reductions in lung growth, especially...

Ruth Leon Recommends… Empress of the Blues – Bessie Smith
Bessie Smith, born in 1894 and orphaned at nine, rose from the segregated South to become the legendary “Empress of the Blues.” A new documentary chronicles her meteoric career, battles with racism, and the enduring legacy of her powerful voice....

The Optimal Rep Range for Muscle Growth Isn’t What You Think
Two recent studies challenge the long‑standing belief that 6‑12 reps are optimal for hypertrophy. One intra‑subject trial found no difference in muscle size or protein synthesis between 8‑12‑rep and 20‑25‑rep sets when both were taken to failure, suggesting load is...

How to Take Action: 12 Habits that Turn Dreams Into Reality
The Positivity Blog outlines twelve practical habits that turn aspirations into concrete results, beginning with tackling the day’s most important task first. It stresses personal responsibility, starting small when motivation wanes, and using timed work‑rest intervals to maintain focus. The...

You Are Not a Manager of Time. You Are a Steward of Energy.
The article challenges the entrenched notion of "time management" and proposes that professionals should view themselves as stewards of energy instead. It distinguishes rituals—purposeful, energizing practices—from routine tasks that merely fill time. By focusing on where energy goes and addressing...

Statues Rule the Waves (2024) by Noah Berhitu Short Film Review
Dutch‑Moluccan filmmaker Noah Berhitu’s short documentary “Statues Rule the Waves” premiered at the 2026 CinemAsia Festival in Amsterdam. The 35‑minute film juxtaposes the statues of Anne Frank and Indonesian heroine Martha Christina Tiahahu to explore post‑colonial heritage and the filmmaker’s...

The Invisible Loss of the Motherless Mother
A mother‑to‑be confesses that, amid awe and exhaustion, she longs for the mother she never had. The post highlights a hidden form of grief that surfaces when a woman becomes a mother without her own mother’s presence. Hope Edelman’s research...

The Myth You Were Sold About Success
The post dismantles the popular "overnight success" myth by highlighting Naval Ravikant’s tweet that success is a lagging indicator of years of unseen work. It uses examples like Jeff Bezos, J.K. Rowling, and Naval himself to show that visible breakthroughs...

The Starship V3 Static Fire Everyone Was Waiting for Just Happened
SpaceX successfully completed a full‑duration static fire of Starship V3 at Starbase, Texas, confirming all 33 Raptor 3 engines ignited together. The test generated roughly 9,240 tons of thrust, enough to lift the Empire State Building, and demonstrates the vehicle’s capability to...

We Never Sleep: Short Film Review
We Never Sleep, a 13‑minute dystopian short directed by Rashan Mines and Ren‑Horng Wang, dramatizes the terror of constant digital surveillance. The plot follows a couple whose casual AI discussion triggers a rogue algorithm, “the Mob,” that weaponizes their words...

Big Pants
The author reflects on the decision to install a full‑length mirror during a bedroom renovation, linking the choice to personal body‑image challenges after having two children. She recounts her shift from millennial size‑zero ideals to embracing post‑natal body changes, noting...

5 Budget Watch Alternatives to Luxury Pieces
Luxury watches such as the Rolex Submariner and Audemars Piguet Royal Oak command five‑figure prices, leaving most consumers out of reach. The article highlights five affordable alternatives—Tissot PRX, Orient Kamasu, Bulova Lunar Pilot, Casio MTP‑B190, and Timex Legacy—that capture the design...

Adriana Ramić at Kunstverein Für Mecklenburg Und Vorpommern in Schwerin
Adriana Ramić presents her first German institutional solo exhibition, "Confusion model into a butterfly," at the Kunstverein für Mecklenburg und Vorpommern in Schwerin. The multimedia show blends five‑channel video, sculpture, and language to explore hybrid identities, transcultural knowledge, and the limits of anthropocentric thought....

Mental Health in Construction: Improvements Are Welcome, but There’s Still Work to Be Done
The construction and demolition sector is grappling with a mental‑health crisis, with CIOB research showing 90% of members under high stress and 84% experiencing high anxiety. In 2024, 355 skilled construction workers died by suicide, one of the highest industry...
Off the Shelf Cell Therapies for Bone Marrow Transplantation with Ossium Health’s Kevin Caldwell — Episode 251
In episode 251 of the Xtalks Life Science Podcast, Kevin Caldwell, CEO and co‑founder of Ossium Health, discusses the company’s pioneering off‑the‑shelf bone‑marrow therapy derived from deceased organ donors. The treatment aims to solve long‑standing clinical and logistical hurdles in...

SpaceX Starship V3 Has Successful Static Fire
SpaceX achieved a full‑duration static fire of Starship V3 (starship 39), with all six Raptor engines igniting as planned. The test validates propulsion upgrades and confirms thrust, vibration, and thermal performance ahead of an integrated flight. Although Booster 19’s launch was postponed...

Kristo Immanuel Interview
Kristo Immanuel, a former Instagram comedian turned actor, debuted as a director in 2025 with the dark comedy “Better Off Dead.” The film swept the 54th Indonesian Film Festival, securing five awards from five nominations. It has launched an international...

I Deleted Todoist. I Built This Instead
The author replaced Todoist with a custom AI agent that handles task creation, retrieval, and daily briefings via natural language. By eliminating UI friction, the agent captures tasks in seconds and provides instant, contextual overviews, addressing common failures of traditional...

Detecting Cold Gas in a Hot Supercluster
Researchers using the MeerKAT radio telescope have mapped neutral hydrogen (HI) in the core of the Shapley Supercluster, the most massive bound structure in the nearby universe. By cross‑matching HI detections with optical data, they confirmed 169 galaxies as bona‑fide...
Viewpoint: CRISPR and mRNA — Under Attack by Technology Skeptics — Poised to Save Millions of Children with Rare Diseases
Rare genetic diseases affect roughly 25 million Americans and generate about $400 billion in annual medical costs, yet fewer than five percent have FDA‑approved therapies. The scarcity of treatments stems from the economics of drug development for tiny patient pools. Recent breakthroughs...

Major Organoids Companies Plus Latest TechBio News
The latest TechBio briefing spotlights the fastest‑growing private organoid firms, highlighting recent Series A‑C rounds that collectively raised over $500 million. Leaders such as OrganoTech, CellSphere, and BioMimic are scaling production pipelines to meet demand from pharma, diagnostics, and personalized‑medicine partners. The...
Musician Jana Horn on Staying Open to Interpretation
In a candid interview, indie musician Jana Horn explains that songs often arrive like elusive ghosts, requiring both intuition and deliberate effort. She treats memory as a pliable co‑writer, allowing past experiences to resurface in new contexts and shape her...

The 8 Best Philosophical Movies of All Time
The article curates eight films that use narrative to explore deep philosophical questions, ranging from classic moral tales like It’s a Wonderful Life to modern sci‑fi meditations such as Blade Runner and The Truman Show. Each entry highlights the core idea the movie tackles—self‑worth, truth,...

Magnesium Effects in Critically Ill Patients
Magnesium deficiency is a pervasive problem in intensive care, affecting up to 65% of ICU patients even when serum tests appear normal. Low intracellular magnesium is linked to higher rates of sepsis, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and increased mortality. Clinical studies...

The Invisible Half (2026) by Masaki Nishiyama Film Review
Masaki Nishiyama’s debut feature "The Invisible Half" reimagines classic J‑horror by trapping a malevolent entity within a teenager’s smartphone and headphones. The story follows mixed‑heritage student Elena, who endures bullying before confronting the digital spirit with her new friend Akari....