Wikipedia Bans AI-Generated Content, and More Library News
Wikipedia has officially banned AI‑generated content, joining a wave of platform crackdowns on synthetic text. The publishing sector is grappling with AI’s encroachment, from the New York Times’ internal AI usage to high‑profile lawsuits against Anthropic, backed by an amicus brief from major publishers. Non‑native English speakers and autistic writers are increasingly misidentified as AI users, while the NYT severed ties with a freelance reviewer for employing AI in his critiques. Meanwhile, the article curates extensive genre‑specific reading lists for libraries and avid readers.
True Class Is Mostly About Knowing when to Stay Silent — the Gossip You Didn’t Spread, the Correction You Didn’t...
The article argues that genuine class is demonstrated through what you choose not to say, not through flashy actions. An anecdote shows that refusing to spread gossip earned the author a collaboration offer, illustrating the power of restraint. Small, everyday...

Designer Sofía Abadi Is Creating a Hyper-Femme World
Argentinian designer Sofia Abadi, 28, is building a hyper‑femme aesthetic that blends nostalgic sleep‑over vibes with bold, playful silhouettes. Her Instagram‑driven cult following has turned her Buenos Aires studio into a launchpad for limited‑run collections that sell out within hours....

Hotel Exile by Jane Rogoyska Review – the Remarkable Story of a Wartime Institution
Jane Rogoyska’s new book, Hotel Exile, chronicles the Hôtel Lutetia’s transformation from a Parisian cultural hotspot into a wartime sanctuary for German anti‑Nazis and later a Nazi intelligence headquarters. The narrative follows key figures such as Heinrich Mann, Walter Benjamin, Irène Némirovsky and photographer...
From 920lb Deadlifts to Marathons: 5 Lessons on Extreme Performance and Resilience
Pete Rubish, once famed for a 920‑lb deadlift, has reinvented himself as a marathon runner, underscoring a profound shift from raw strength to cardiovascular health. After quitting performance‑enhancing drugs, he grappled with heightened health anxiety, a 24 mm kidney stone that...

Nico Williams & Alejandro Balde's Nike By You Creations Are Pro-Grade
Nike’s custom‑design platform Nike By You, now in its third decade, has attracted two Spanish football stars. Barcelona left‑back Alejandro Balde created a personalized Air Max 95 that blends black leather with orange highlights and an embroidered "3" to mark his...

These Colorful Chocolate Candies Are One Of The Best Unexpected Beer Pairings
Two beverage experts explain how various beer styles can elevate the flavor of M&M candies. Stouts are recommended for plain chocolate M&Ms, while brown ales, Belgian dubbels, and cream ales complement flavored varieties such as caramel, peanut, and cookies‑and‑cream. Both...
LAUSD to Vote on Restricting Student Screen Time, After Years of Encouraging Classroom Use
The Los Angeles Unified School District board will vote on a resolution that bans screens for kindergarten and first‑grade students and imposes strict limits on device use for older elementary grades. The measure, driven by research linking excessive screen time...

Karlovy Vary Film Festival to Celebrate 80th Anniversary With Art, Historic Films
The Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (KVIFF) will mark its 80th anniversary and 60th edition this July, featuring historic exhibitions, restored Czech films, and a special "Out of the Past" lineup of 20 classic titles. Organizers will rework outdoor spaces, showcase...
What THC Drinks Can — and Can’t — Do for Sleep, Stress, and Pain
Hemp‑derived THC beverages have surged to about $1.1 billion in 2024, fueled by consumer demand for sleep, stress and pain relief. The FDA has issued warning letters to firms making unsubstantiated health claims, highlighting a gap between marketing and scientific evidence....

Casa Lèvanzo / Margine
Casa Lèvanzo, a 140 m² villa in Caprarica, Lecce, was completely renovated for a young professional couple. The 1970s‑era villa shed its complex canopies and overhangs, revealing a cleaner composition of cylindrical and rectangular volumes finished in white plaster. Original Rosa...
Turn Off Your Sleep Tracker
The essay critiques the wellness boom around sleep trackers, highlighting how they can foster orthosomnia—anxiety over achieving perfect sleep—and often provide inaccurate data. It argues for viewing personality as fluid traits rather than fixed types, which eases self‑criticism and improves...
Beats and Jennie Are Back Together With an Unreleased Song and New Headphones
Beats and K‑pop icon Jennie are releasing a new onyx‑black special‑edition headphone on April 24, paired with an exclusive, unreleased track. The design features attachable black bows, music‑inspired ear‑pad symbols, and a matching carrying case. A Seoul pop‑up will let fans...

Why Aspirin Is Becoming a Weapon Against Cancer
Aspirin, the 4,000‑year‑old painkiller, is now shown to cut colorectal cancer risk in high‑genetic‑risk patients. A 10‑year trial of 861 Lynch‑syndrome participants found a daily 600 mg dose halved cancer incidence, and a lower 75‑100 mg dose appears equally effective. The UK...

If You Ask Me: Save the Rich White Women
Libby Gelman‑Waxner’s column spotlights a growing streaming‑TV formula that centers affluent white women in crisis, citing Nicole Kidman’s repeated roles in titles like *The Perfect Couple* and *The Undoing*. The piece outlines a recurring playbook: opulent homes, glamorous wardrobes, troubled...
Tom Brady's New Play: Making GLP-1s Affordable for Healthcare Workers
Tom Brady, co‑owner of eMed, is launching an employer‑subsidized GLP‑1 program aimed at U.S. healthcare workers. Employers pay a fixed $25 per employee each month, while employees cover $99 for medication and 24/7 clinical support. eMed reports participants lose an...

New Blood Test Aims to Spot Liver Scarring Before It Paves the Way to Cancer
Researchers at Johns Hopkins have developed a blood test that analyzes cell‑free DNA fragments with a machine‑learning model to identify early‑stage liver fibrosis, a reversible precursor to cirrhosis and liver cancer. In a study of 423 participants, the assay detected...

Are You Actually Getting Fitter? Simple Field Tests for Mountain Athletes
Mountain athletes often lack reliable ways to gauge fitness because terrain, weather and altitude make traditional metrics like pace or mileage inconsistent. The article introduces practical field tests—nose‑breathing checks, heart‑rate drift, and anaerobic threshold time trials—to pinpoint aerobic and anaerobic...

Iggy Pop: “I Wanted More Aggression for the Music”
In a 2006 Uncut interview, Iggy Pop reflects on his four‑decade career, emphasizing his drive for greater aggression and complexity in the Stooges’ early albums, especially "Fun House." He recounts using precisely timed LSD to sharpen studio performances and details...
Is Thriller the Best Album Ever?
Michael Jackson’s 1982 album *Thriller* continues to dominate conversations about the greatest record of all time, thanks to its unprecedented sales, iconic music videos, and cultural footprint. While Rolling Stone’s Top 500 list places it at #12, fans and industry analysts...

Top 10 Things to Do in Richmond, Virginia
The guide spotlights Richmond, Virginia’s top ten attractions, ranging from historic districts and world‑class museums to vibrant food corridors and riverfront parks. It highlights the city’s blend of colonial heritage, a burgeoning arts scene, and outdoor recreation along the James...

JAXA Mulls Launching H3 Test Rocket in June After Last Year's Failure
Japan's aerospace agency JAXA is weighing a June 10 test launch of its H3 rocket after a December 22 failure that broke the vehicle mid‑flight. The investigation pinpointed an adhesion problem in the satellite‑mounting structure, prompting repairs across affected components. The...

We've Survived Bladder Cancer, But Live With the Effects of Surgery. Tough Love Isn't What We Need
Bladder cancer patients who undergo cystectomy often face profound emotional distress from living with an ostomy, a reality that many spouses and caregivers fail to grasp. Psychotherapist Bernadette Chin emphasizes that compassionate, non‑judgmental presence—simple gestures like a hug or quiet...
How to Operate PV-Driven Residential Heat Pumps Under Time-Varying Tariffs
Researchers at Cranfield University in the UK have created a day‑ahead scheduling model for residential heat pumps that leverages rooftop PV output and time‑varying electricity tariffs. The framework combines distributionally robust chance‑constrained programming with DOE‑ANOVA analysis to handle PV forecast...
Frog – Frog for Sale
Frog’s eighth studio effort, "Frog for Sale," drops on April 17, 2026, marking the band’s fourth release since 2023’s "Grog." The Bateman brothers weave Buddy Holly, Paul McCartney, Motown, and folk‑rock textures into piano‑driven tracks like "Dark Out" and "Je Ne...

David Dhawan on AI in Hai Jawani Toh Ishq Hona Hai Teaser, Directing Son Varun: ‘It Was Presentable’
David Dhawan clarified that no artificial intelligence was used in the upcoming film *Hai Jawani Toh Ishq Hona Hai*, despite a teaser that featured AI‑generated talking babies. He emphasized that he directs his son Varun Dhawan like any other actor,...

Skoltech Finds a Viable Path for 3D Printing Aluminum Bronze
Researchers at Skoltech, in collaboration with Russian and Indian partners, have demonstrated that laser powder bed fusion can reliably print aluminum bronze (Cu‑9.5Al‑1Fe) with mechanical and thermal properties comparable to cast material. By fine‑tuning laser power (90‑150 W) and scan speed...
How John Dowland Built a Music Career on Tearful Melancholy
John Dowland, the Elizabethan lutenist and composer, built his enduring reputation on the melancholic “tear” motif, epitomized by his 1604 *Lachrimae* collection and the famed “Lachrimae Pavan.” The piece began as a wordless lute dance and gained lyrics in his...
Ben Affleck Gives Jennifer Lopez His Share of $60 Million, 24-Bathroom Beverly Hills Mansion
Ben Affleck has relinquished his stake in the $60 million Beverly Hills mansion to ex‑wife Jennifer Lopez at no cost, ending a protracted effort to sell the property. The estate, bought for $60.9 million in 2023 and repeatedly relisted with declining prices,...
Book Review: ‘The Palm House,’ by Gwendoline Riley
Gwendoline Riley’s novel *The Palm House* follows veteran editor Edmund Putnam’s resignation after a corporate‑appointed successor, Simon “Shove” Halfpenny, attempts to remodel the niche London magazine *Sequence* into a New‑Yorker‑style publication. Narrated by contributor Laura, the story exposes the clash...
‘Funny Pages,’ ‘BlackBerry’ and More Streaming Gems
The latest streaming roundup spotlights under‑the‑radar indie titles, led by Owen Kline’s debut feature Funny Pages on Amazon Prime Video. Produced by the Safdie brothers, the film blends dark comedy with a chaotic portrait of a high‑schooler chasing a comic‑book...

American Idol Judge Talks ‘Insane’ Return After 20+ Years
Jennifer Hudson reappeared on American Idol as a guest judge, marking her first on‑screen role with the franchise since finishing seventh in its third season 22 years ago. The EGOT‑winning singer‑actress reflected on the "insane" feeling of moving from contestant...

The Case for Letting Kids Go Rock Climbing
Rock climbing advocates Jesse Godlington of Squamish Climbing Academy and Jason D. Martin of the American Alpine Institute argue that climbing is an ideal sport for children. An eight‑year‑old recently summited a 5.9 multipitch at a camp, illustrating kids' resilience....
Book Review: ‘How It Feels to Be Alive,’ by Megan O’Grady
Megan O’Grady’s new book “How It Feels to Be Alive” merges art criticism with personal memoir, echoing the narrative style of Olivia Laing and John Berger. The work intersperses original interviews she conducted for *T: The New York Times Style Magazine* with...

Why Are Respected Film-Makers Suddenly Embracing AI?
Steven Soderbergh’s new film *The Christophers* spotlights his renewed interest in generative AI, which he plans to use for dream‑like imagery in a forthcoming John Lennon documentary and a Spanish‑American War feature. His ambivalent comments have sparked debate as other...

Book Review: ‘Permanence,’ by Sophie Mackintosh
Sophie Mackintosh’s new novel *Permanence* explores an alternate reality where an illicit affair becomes a curdled paradise, juxtaposing it against a conventional marriage. The book continues her signature speculative feminist style, using a stark binary to dissect power dynamics and...

Curiosity Rover Finds Signs of Ancient Life on Mars
NASA’s Curiosity rover, using its Sample Analysis on Mars (SAM) suite, identified more than 20 organic compounds in clay-rich rocks at Glen Torridon, Gale crater. Among the detections were a nitrogen‑containing molecule resembling proto‑DNA and benzothiophene, a sulfur‑bearing compound linked...

Euclid Space Warps: Help Spot Galaxies Bending Spacetime
The Zooniverse‑hosted Space Warps project invites volunteers to hunt for strong gravitational lenses in new images from ESA’s Euclid telescope. In its first tiny slice of data, AI‑assisted citizen scientists uncovered 500 galaxy‑galaxy lenses, and the upcoming Data Release 1 will present...
Ep. 26: Where the Primeval West Abides
In episode 26 of the MeatEater podcast, host Dan Flores recounts a nine‑day river float through Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), where his party encountered massive herds of Porcupine caribou, wolves, grizzlies and Dall sheep under 24‑hour summer solstice...

FAO Highlights Importance of Group B Streptococcus ST283 as Atypical Foodborne Disease
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has flagged Group B Streptococcus ST283 as an atypical, food‑borne pathogen linked to freshwater fish. Unlike classic gastro‑intestinal illnesses, ST283 can cause invasive conditions such as meningitis, septic arthritis and bacteremia, even in healthy individuals....

Prone To Be Productive: In Praise of Writing in Bed
Megan O’Grady’s essay champions writing from bed as a productive, creative practice, citing personal experience and historic writers like Wharton and Twain. She describes how the comfort of a bed reduces distractions, supports chronic‑illness sufferers, and can spark deeper insight...

Jayne Anne Phillips on Chronicling Her West Virginia Upbringing and Writer’s Journey
Jayne Anne Phillips, celebrated author of the war‑novel trilogy and the acclaimed collection Black Tickets, has published her first memoir‑in‑essays, Small Town Girls. The book recounts her West Virginia childhood, family dynamics, and the cultural shifts of the 1950s‑70s, while...
Michael North America Box Office: What It Needs To Beat Lionsgate’s Biggest Domestic Hit – The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
The Antoine Fuqua‑directed musical biopic Michael, starring Jaafar Jackson as his father, is set for a U.S. theatrical debut on April 24, 2026 and will be handled by Lionsgate domestically. Industry trackers at Box Office Pro estimate a $65‑80 million opening...
New Catalogues Reveal Royal Collection's Vast Sculpture Holdings—And Queen Victoria's Acquisition Spree
Jonathan Marsden, former royal household surveyor, has released a four‑volume catalogue documenting roughly 1,800 sculptures in the Royal Collection, spread across Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, Hampton Court, Kensington Palace and Osborne House. The work uncovers hidden gems such as a...

A New Italian Social Hub Debuts High Above Miami’s Financial District
Seia, an Italian‑styled restaurant and club, has opened on the 54th floor of Miami’s new 830 Brickell office tower, the city’s first major standalone office building in over a decade. Designed by Laurence Macadam, the venue showcases museum‑grade works by Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst...

BC Supreme Court Strikes Double Ticketing Claim but Not Drip Pricing Claim Against Cineplex
The British Columbia Supreme Court partially granted Cineplex’s motion to strike a consumer class action, dismissing the double‑ticketing claim while allowing the drip‑pricing claim to proceed. The dispute stems from online booking fees introduced in June 2022, which the Competition...

How the Right Living Environment Transforms Outcomes for People With Disability
The article highlights how supported independent living and tailored disability accommodation improve health outcomes for people with disabilities. It explains the shift from institutional settings to community‑based homes, driven by Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) which funds housing and...

UK’s GRUBBY Doubles Down on Frozen Ready Meals with Seven New Plant-Based Dishes
UK plant‑based kit brand GRUBBY has doubled its frozen ready‑meal portfolio, adding seven new dishes to bring the total to 16. The new meals, sold exclusively on its website, each provide about 25 g of protein, 10 g of fibre and 9.25...
Fabricating Perovskite Solar Cells with Robotic Boxes
An international team unveiled an AI‑driven robotic platform that autonomously designs, fabricates, and optimizes perovskite solar cells. The closed‑loop system produced and tested 50,764 devices, achieving a peak power conversion efficiency of 27% (certified 26.5%). The workflow combines a recipe...
Awarapan 2 Release Date Locked: Emraan Hashmi Returns To Iconic Action Romance Sequel
The sequel to the cult‑classic thriller Awarapan is slated for a theatrical debut on August 14, 2026, confirmed by producer Vishesh Bhatt via social media. Emraan Hashmi will reprise his iconic role, joining newcomer Disha Patani in a story that...