U S TV

Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

Tiny Boosts for Tough Medicines

Some medicines are super useful. They might be natural compounds, like an isoflavone called puerarin. But here's a big problem: the body struggles to absorb them when you take them by mouth. These molecules often don't dissolve well or they can't pass through your gut lining easily. Scientists need

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026CRIME

The Lie That Became a Tragedy

Some people build entire lives on a massive illusion. Taylor Parker did this. She convinced her boyfriend that she was pregnant. This lie became incredibly complicated over time. She worked hard to make it seem real. Think about all the effort: fake doctor visits, gender reveal parties, even using p

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

Mystery Lights Over the Northeast USA

Sometimes, what people see doesn't fit into our normal understanding of things. People living in the northeastern part of the United States have reported seeing incredibly strange objects in the sky. These incidents are not just random flashes; they involve glowing orbs and spheres that seem to defy

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026POLITICS

Kazakhstan's Big Political Switch-Up

So, there is a huge political shift happening in Kazakhstan right now. The country is making big changes under its current leadership. This is all part of preparing for future leaders. The long-time ruling party, Amanat, has made an unexpected decision. It is folding itself into a different organiz

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026RELIGION

What Spain’s migrant crisis reveals about Europe’s broken promises

Spain’s Canary Islands have become a deadly bottleneck for people fleeing war and poverty in Africa. Over 46, 000 arrived in 2024 alone—nearly 50 times higher than a decade ago. The journey from West Africa is brutal: rickety boats, little food, and unpredictable Atlantic storms. More than 3, 000 pe

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026FINANCE

A Bank Sells Part of Itself for a Big Payday

United Community Banks just agreed to sell its equipment finance division for $1. 9 billion in cash. The two subsidiaries being sold—Navitas Credit Corp. and NLFC Reinsurance Corp. —have been a headache for the bank lately. They make up only 10% of the loans but have caused half of the bank’s losses

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

AI models take on the ocean’s hidden patterns

Scientists now use deep learning to map the ocean’s slow dance with the sky. Traditional weather tools struggle when forecasts stretch beyond a few weeks, but new AI models are starting to close that gap. One such model, called KIST-Ocean, runs a global simulation of ocean currents in three dimensio

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Smart Way to Beat Summer Sticky Air Without Blowing Your Budget

Summer heat is more than just high temperatures—it’s the thick, heavy feeling that sticks to your skin and makes every room feel like a swamp. Humidity above 40% turns a home into an uncomfortable space, and most people respond by blasting the air conditioning. But cooling the air doesn’t just lower

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026HEALTH

Flu shots still work against the most common winter strain

Surprisingly, the flu vaccine from last year kept protecting people even as a new version of the H3N2 virus started spreading. Public health experts had worried the shot wouldn’t fight off these slightly changed viruses. But in adults, the protection stayed strong, according to new findings. This is

reading time less than a minute
Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

When Brain Clues Show Up Early: Cracking the Code of Alzheimer's

Scientists are focusing on a sticky protein called amyloid beta that builds up in the brain years before memory problems start. This protein is like a warning sign for Alzheimer's disease, but it shows up so slowly that doctors usually catch it too late. The big question is whether we can predict wh

reading time less than a minute