
The Different Types of Miso & When to Use Each One
The video demystifies miso by breaking down its two most common varieties—white (often called "shiro") and red (sometimes labeled brown or dark). It explains that white miso undergoes a short fermentation of a few weeks to a few months, resulting in a milder, sweeter profile, while red miso ferments for many months, developing a robust, salty depth. Key insights focus on pairing: white miso shines in light applications such as salad dressings, cheese sauces, or delicate soups, whereas red miso is suited for heartier dishes like roasted salmon, chicken, or beef, where its intensity can stand up to strong flavors. The presenter also notes that miso sold with dashi already infused is ideal for traditional miso soup. Examples include a quick miso glaze recipe—brush salmon or chicken with a blend of red miso and bake for seven minutes—and a reminder to check whether miso is stored in the refrigerated section, as unpasteurized varieties retain active enzymes that support gut health. For cooks and food businesses, understanding these distinctions enables more precise flavor engineering and leverages miso’s probiotic benefits, turning a simple pantry staple into a strategic ingredient for both taste and nutrition.

That Land Rover Went Flying 🤣
The video captures a light‑hearted off‑road showdown pitting a Land Rover Defender against a Toyota and a Jeep on a steep, slippery course. The informal competition, streamed to a cheering online audience, awards points based on how far each vehicle...

Signs You’re Dissociating and Calling It ‘Zoning Out. #shorts
The short video warns viewers that frequent “zoning out” may be more than harmless mind‑wandering—it can signal dissociative episodes where consciousness disconnects from self and surroundings. It outlines four hallmark symptoms: depersonalization (feeling like a passenger in one’s own body), derealization...

Sultan in Oman by Jan Morris | Hay Festival Book Club MARCH 2026
At the Hay Festival Book Club, Gary Raymond led a discussion of Jan Morris’s Sultan in Oman with guests Sarah Wheeler and Barnaby Roger, revisiting Morris’s six-week 1954–55 journey into Oman with the Sultan and his retinue. The panel highlighted...

The Monitor I'm Using for Baby Number 2
In a recent FatherCraft video, host Mark announces his choice of baby monitor for his second child, due in April, after testing multiple devices. He settles on the Yuthi E21 Space View, a $200 unit that requires no monthly subscription, records...

This Compound Stops Greying Hair (and Reduces Wrinkles)
The video explains how the visible signs of aging—gray hair, thinning hair, and wrinkling skin—are driven primarily by metabolic decline rather than merely structural wear. Central to this process is nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), a co‑enzyme essential for cellular energy,...

What to Do with Triggers
The video addresses how individuals can transform the way they respond to emotional triggers, emphasizing that triggers are not the cause of behavior but signals that create a decision point. It explains that between a stimulus and a reaction lies a...

BTS Arirang Album Review #shorts
The short video serves as a fan‑centric review of BTS’s latest release, the "Arirang" album, zeroing in on the accompanying music video and the group’s penchant for cryptic storytelling. The presenter walks through the visual narrative, noting the paradox of...

The Difficulty of Critiquing Black Artists with Rachel Hunter Himes | S10, EP6 DIALOGUES PODCAST
The Dialogues podcast episode features Rachel Hunter‑Himes discussing her recent Triple Canopy essay “Black Block,” which interrogates the persistent tendency to read Black art primarily through a political lens and to substitute artist identity for substantive critique. She argues that...

Ask a Neuroscientist: Sarah Heilbronner
Dr. Sarah Heilbronner outlines how magnetic resonance imaging, the workhorse of modern neuroscience, can be tuned to reveal three distinct layers of brain information. Structural MRI produces high‑resolution maps of gray‑matter regions, white‑matter tracts, ventricles, and the brain’s relationship to...

$52,000,000 CALIFORNIA Mansion With an Underground Supercar Garage #shorts #california #mansiontour
The short video showcases a $52 million California mansion listed for sale, highlighting its dramatic architecture, indoor‑outdoor flow, and a multi‑level underground garage designed for high‑performance automobiles. The tour walks viewers through an open‑plan living area that opens onto a pool lounge...

I Broke Down in the Sahara Desert (Car Won't Start)
The video documents the creator’s first long‑distance off‑road foray into Mauritania’s Sahara, where a 200‑mile desert trek quickly turns into a double misadventure: deep‑sand entrapment and a complete engine failure. After departing the capital with a full tank, groceries, and...

London’s Best Cocktail Bars? Here’s a Bunch to Add to Your List. They’ll Take Good Care of You. 🍸
The video is a rapid‑fire tour of London’s most compelling cocktail bars, from upscale hotel lounges to hidden speakeasies. It showcases each venue’s signature style—whether it’s Albers’ theatrical glass‑swap ritual, the secretive bouncer‑guarded entrance of a downtown speakeasy, or the...

Walk-A-Tif: Bangkok Rolls Out Cooling Centres This Summer
Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has opened 304 free cooling centers across the city this summer, converting district offices, schools and recreation centers into air-conditioned shelters operating daily from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The program targets nearby low-income residents—within about a...

Psychologist Reacts to Viola Davis
In a recent video, clinical psychologist Dr. Becky dissects a viral clip of actress Viola Davis praising “bad kids,” arguing that the phrase reveals a deeper parenting philosophy. Davis’s anecdote about a toddler sticking his finger in a wedding cake becomes...

Peptides Target “Undruggable” Diseases
Santa Cruz‑based company specializing in unnatural macrocyclic peptide therapeutics announced a $45 million Series B round and a $1.7 billion collaboration with Novartis. The partnership targets cardiovascular proteins that have eluded conventional small‑molecule and antibody approaches. The firm positions macrocyclic peptides between traditional small...

Wigner's Friend Thought Experiment Explained
The video explains the Wigner’s Friend thought experiment, originally sketched by Hugh Everett and later popularized by Eugene Wigner, in which a sealed laboratory contains an observer who measures a quantum superposition. Two mutually exclusive descriptions arise: the friend inside the...

This NYC Food Tour Feels Like Your Childhood
The video follows host Hley on a nostalgic food tour of New York City, highlighting dishes that evoke childhood memories—from a rare Palestinian Hakkawi cheese snack paired with a pineapple‑flavored juice box to a classic chocolate‑chip cookie. Each stop showcases...

Fruit Is BAD for Your HEART?! | What the Fitness | Biolayne
The video opens with a provocative claim that fruit harms the heart, citing Dr. Spock’s warning about fructose. The host quickly pivots, arguing that the real culprit is excess added sugar, not the natural sugars found in whole fruit. The presenter...

Quantum Fields: The Real Building Blocks of the Universe - with David Tong #shorts #quantumphysics
In a concise short, physicist David Tong revisits Michael Faraday’s groundbreaking insight that electric and magnetic fields are real, invisible entities threading through every point of space. The video frames this idea as one of the most radical abstractions in...

Barbell Hamstring Smash in Rack for Deadlift Mobility, Low Back Relief & Better Jefferson Curls
The video introduces a barbell‑based hamstring “smash” performed in a rack, designed to flood the medial hamstrings with load while the athlete is in deep flexion. By tucking the knee to the chest and pressing the bar against the back...

Book Club Edition: The Giant Leap: Why Space Is the Next Frontier in the Evolution of Life
The Planetary Society’s book‑club episode spotlights Caleb Sharf’s recently released The Giant Leap, arguing that humanity’s spread beyond Earth will be the next major evolutionary transition. Sharf frames space colonization not as a luxury but as an inevitable “dispersal” that...

Seurat's The Lighthouse at Honfleur | The Griffin Catalyst Exhibition: Seurat and the Sea
The Griffin Catalyst exhibition spotlights Georges Seurat’s 1884 canvas “The Lighthouse at Honfleur,” a coastal view that had become a postcard staple. By placing the lighthouse and its surrounding elements at the extreme edge of the frame, Seurat reinterprets a...

Robert Barry – The Defining of It…
The evening marked the launch of a richly illustrated volume on Robert Barry, the 90‑year‑old pioneer whose work bridges minimalism and conceptual art. Hosted by the research forum, the event featured introductions from leading scholars—including Terry Smith, Slade Professor at Cambridge—and artists...

Dr. Nate Wood on Culinary School, Food as Medicine & Building a Career | Culinary School to Career
In a candid interview, Dr. Nate Wood explains how a culinary school experience reshaped his trajectory from physician to food‑medicine advocate, highlighting the unexpected value of friendships and hands‑on cooking training. Wood recounts entering culinary school expecting classic French techniques, only...

The Connection Crisis at Work
The episode of People and Strategy hosted by Mo Fatalb features Dr. Tracy Brower discussing the growing “connection crisis” in workplaces, highlighting that half of the global workforce reports loneliness and that the sense that someone cares at work has...

"I Think What They're Trying to Say Is He Makes Weird Buildings" | Podcast | Dezeen Weekly
The Dezeen Weekly podcast episode centers on architect Smilian Radic, whose work has been described by a recent award jury as “weird” yet profoundly experimental. Host commentary highlights the difficulty of translating Radic’s spatial language into words, noting that his...

Ed O'Brien on Working with Jazz Musician Shabaka #EdOBrien
Ed O'Brien, Radiohead guitarist, explains his recent solo album’s direction, emphasizing a deliberate shift toward classical and jazz influences. He recounts how the desire to move beyond the familiar Radiohead framework led him to invite jazz saxophonist and composer Shabaka...

Nothing Is Real
The video is a polemical monologue lamenting the U.S. president’s recent statements about “taking” Cuba, framing them as an unprecedented imperial overture and likening them to other far‑fetched ideas such as annexing Greenland or turning Canada into a 51st state. The...

How I Optimized My Recovery Routine | JJ Virgin
The video features fitness expert JJ Virgin explaining how a focused recovery routine—centered on sunlight exposure and infrared sauna—can unlock muscle growth and metabolic health for women over 40. She argues that simply adding more cardio or stricter diets stalls...

Emotionography | Jonathan Potter & Alexa Hepburn Spotlight
The video introduces Emotionography, a methodological shift championed by Jonathan Potter and Alexa Hepburn, arguing that traditional emotion research relies on questionnaires and lab tasks that strip emotion from its lived context. They advocate analyzing audio‑video recordings of natural settings—family meals,...

CMS Experiment | Scintillator Tiles for the HiLumi LHC Era
The CMS experiment at CERN is undergoing a major upgrade to accommodate the High‑Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL‑LHC), which will increase collision rates ten‑fold and demand a new, high‑granularity calorimeter (HGCal). To meet the HL‑LHC’s precision goals, the detector will incorporate...

Meditation and Yoga for Everyday Life with Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche
In the talk, Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche explains how yoga and meditation can be merged through “awareness yoga,” a practice that deliberately couples physical movement with present‑moment attention. He argues that when the mind drifts to past regrets or future tasks, the...

Mobile Art School with Thomas J Price
The Grace School of Art’s Mobile Art School travels across northeast Scotland, delivering hands‑on creative workshops to neighborhoods that lack regular access to arts programming. By setting up pop‑up studios in places like Brimar, the initiative turns public spaces into...

Ken Eurich Plays On That/Off That: Being in the Pit, TikTok Trends, Karaoke
The clip is a casual interview with Ken Eurich, host of Rolling Stone’s “On That/Off That,” where he riffs on his personal rules for live music, karaoke and social‑media trends. Eurich admits he only goes to concerts when he knows every...

30 Day Body Transformation
The video chronicles a personal 90‑day body transformation undertaken to prepare for a Sideman charity football match at Wembley Stadium. Facing a tight deadline, the narrator intensifies football-specific training and completely revamps his nutrition, aiming to shed weight and improve...

Why Does Servicing A Watch Cost So Much?
The video explains why servicing a mechanical watch commands premium prices, tracing the cost back to the sheer complexity of the movements. Even a basic three‑hand caliber houses more than a hundred tiny parts, while chronographs and high‑complication pieces can...

Why The Buffy Reboot Just Got Cancelled
Hulu's long‑teased Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot, to be led by Oscar‑nominated director Chloé Zhao with Sarah Michelle Gellar attached, has been cancelled, Gellar confirmed on social media. Industry reporting suggests a messy behind‑the‑scenes dispute and finger‑pointing, with Gellar accusing...

Picturing Landscape in an Age of Extraction
The evening celebrated Stephanie O. Rock’s new monograph, *Picturing Landscape in an Age of Extraction* (University of Chicago Press), which situates European art history within the environmental and colonial economies of 1780‑1850. Rock argues that late‑eighteenth‑ and early‑nineteenth‑century landscape painting...

What SpongeBob Understands About Life (That You Don’t)
The video argues that SpongeBob SquarePants, despite his absurd premise, serves as a modern illustration of Aristotle’s concept of eudaimonia – a flourishing life achieved through virtue rather than material success. It contrasts the characters’ relentless chase for wealth, fame, and...

Why This Is REALLY Happening in Spider-Man Brand New Day
Spider‑Man: Brand New Day is the upcoming fourth MCU‑linked Spider‑Man film, slated as the 38th entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton and written by Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers, the movie reunites Tom Holland with...

What if There Was a Racing Series with Virtually No Rules?
The Canadian-American Challenge Cup (Can‑Am) ran from 1966‑1974 as a SECA‑sanctioned series that imposed virtually no technical limits—only wheel‑covering bodywork, a passenger‑size cockpit, and basic safety rules. Without constraints, engineers pushed horsepower from roughly 550 hp in early McLaren M1Cs to...

Why MCAS, POTS, and Ehlers-Danlos Often Occur Together
The video spotlights the “evil triad” – mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) and hypermobile Ehlers‑Danlos syndrome (hEDS) – a cluster that often eludes standard diagnosis. It explains how MCAS triggers systemic inflammation that impairs gut...

U.S. Photographer Mustafah Abdulaziz Frames Our Relationship with Water From Drought to Spirituality
Mustafah Abdulaziz frames photography as a human language that mirrors the space between observer and subject, using water as a metaphorical canvas to explore climate change, poverty, and spirituality. He argues that a photograph differs fundamentally from a generic image,...

5 AI Books That Took Me From Confused to Confident 🤯📚
The video opens with the creator admitting to feeling lost in the fast‑moving world of generative AI, then positions five carefully selected books as a step‑by‑step roadmap from confusion to confidence. Each title serves a distinct purpose: Goodfellow, Bengio and Courville’s...

Inside a Courtyard Home That Feels Like a Private World (House Tour)
The video tours Bournian Residence, a three‑bedroom, two‑bathroom home in Strathmore, Victoria, designed by Rise Architecture for the director’s parents. The project became a personal tribute after the architect’s father passed away, shaping a sanctuary for the next phase of...

A Framework for Action | Frankly 132
The video titled “A Framework for Action” lays out a comprehensive response plan to what the speaker calls the “more‑than‑human predicament”—the accelerating depletion of planetary carbon stores, crossing of multiple planetary boundaries, and a geopolitical shock in the Strait of...

The Only Goal In Life | Sadhguru
In a recent talk titled “The Only Goal In Life,” Sadhguru argues that every human experience—whether a personal tragedy or a routine milestone—serves a single, overarching purpose he labels “MTI.” He frames this purpose as the ultimate destination beyond the...

How to Book Business Class for a Family of 4 Using Points
The video addresses a viewer’s request on how to secure four one‑way business‑class tickets to London using a patchwork of Marriott, Chase, and airline points. The host walks through the family’s fragmented balances—points spread across the primary account, a spouse’s...

Why Brains Need Friends | Discussion with Dr. Ben Rein
The Allen Institute’s Science Matters fireside chat featured neuroscientist Ben Rein discussing his new book “Why Brains Need Friends.” Rein framed social connection as a biological drive comparable to food and water, noting the Surgeon General’s 2023 declaration of loneliness...