QUE

Apr 19 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Different paths to sharing a life: Two new memoirs show two sides of storytelling

One recent release dives deep while another zooms ahead. In one book, the author collects years of memories like a gardener gathering apples; in the other, the author skips from idea to idea so fast the pages almost flip themselves. No grand speeches, no heavy conclusions—just two honest looks at ho

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026SPORTS

How a tiny dot on a putter can help your golf game

Golfers know putting can make or break a round. A shaky stroke often means a missed putt. That’s why Ping designed the Scottsdale TEC putter series with a unique feature: a small dot near the top. The idea is simple—focus on that dot when you set up, and your eyes stay steady. This "quiet eye" techn

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026OPINION

How NPR talks about Iran - and why it matters

NPR often calls Iran a "regime" but calls other governments just "governments. " It’s a simple word difference, but it shows how news organizations pick sides. Look at Israel, for example: it holds elections but only for about half its population. Meanwhile, Iran holds real elections across its whol

reading time less than a minute
Apr 17 2026HEALTH

The Plastic‑Detox Myth: What the Show Gets Wrong

A new Netflix series claims that tiny plastic particles are shrinking men’s genitals and killing sperm. It follows five couples who try to stop using plastic for three months and then report more babies. The program sounds like a reality show, not science. The host is an epidemiologist who talks ab

reading time less than a minute
Apr 17 2026ENVIRONMENT

Urban Air Microplastics: How We Measure and Why It Matters

The quick review looked at how scientists catch tiny plastic particles in city air and then figure out what they are. They pulled data from 35 research papers that used active sampling—devices that pull air through filters—to measure how much plastic people might breathe. The papers showed that ac

reading time less than a minute
Apr 17 2026CRIME

From Glitter to Handcuffs: A Brazilian Influencer’s Fall from Glamour to Crime

In Brazil, a woman known for her flashy social media posts and fashion store found herself in serious trouble this week. Sara Monteiro, who once called herself the "Miss Uberlandia 2025, " was arrested during a major drug bust operation in Sao Paulo. Authorities say she used money from drug traffick

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026OPINION

Trump’s Shocking Claim: A Lesson in Trust and Truth

A former president posted a photo that made him look like a saint. He then said the picture showed him as a doctor or a Red Cross worker, not a religious figure. The claim was quickly deleted after people cried out. He followed the same pattern he’s used before: lie, blame the press, and ke

reading time less than a minute
Apr 14 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Less is more: How quiet moments stick in our minds better than flashy ones

Some TV shows prove that striking moments come from calm, not chaos. In Black Bird, a character's pause before making a big choice says more than shouting ever could. A small movement, like a hand slowly lifting, reveals feelings the loudest dialogue can’t capture. While most crime shows race ahead

reading time less than a minute
Apr 13 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Beyonce? Not Yet: Why Bieber’s Quiet Set Sparks a Big Debate

Bieber headlined Coachella with a low‑key show that left many fans divided. He chose simple staging, no dancers, and spent a chunk of his set looking up old songs on YouTube. Some viewers called it lazy, especially when compared to the flashy performance by another female headliner who wowed with co

reading time less than a minute
Apr 12 2026POLITICS

Looking ahead: How U. S. politics might change without Trump

The 2026 midterm elections could mark a quiet turning point in American politics—one that has little to do with any single leader. Behind the headlines about rising tensions and election drama, there’s a growing sense that the country is tired of being defined by conflict. Polls show trust in tradit

reading time less than a minute