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Jun 09 2026SPORTS

Celebrity Crowd Lights Up NBA Finals

The 2026 NBA Finals drew a star‑packed audience that turned the game into a pop culture spectacle. Fans and icons alike filled Madison Square Garden, turning the arena into a celebrity hotspot. Spike Lee, known for his vibrant film work, was seen cheering loudly from the stands, adding a cinem

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Jun 09 2026CELEBRITIES

Knicks‑Spurs Finals: Who Came to the Garden

The Knicks are back in New York for their first Finals game in 27 years, and the crowd was packed with familiar faces. Fans saw a mix of Hollywood stars and former NBA legends cheering on the team from the front row. Timothée Chalamet, a big Knicks fan, flew in with Fat Joe on a private jet.

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Jun 09 2026CRYPTO

Tiny typo turns into a six-figure meme token—with a side of questionable dares

A misspelled word on a dare board just became a half-million-dollar lesson in memecoin madness. A bounty popped up last week asking someone to permanently ink “$boutywork” on their forehead. A volunteer did it, live on camera, believing the spelling matched the task exactly. But the token that launc

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Jun 08 2026SCIENCE

Sodium Power That Works From Frost to Heat

A new design tweak in the tiny molecules of ether solvents lets sodium metal batteries stay reliable from -40 to 70°C. Scientists found that the usual weakly solvating ethers are too volatile, which makes them unsafe at high temperatures. By reshaping the ether molecules, they strengthened the

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

Why do smokers and non-smokers focus differently on images?

Research shows people react differently to visual cues based on their habits. A study compared smokers and non-smokers by tracking how they moved a computer mouse toward images on a screen. The images were unrelated to smoking, pleasant, unpleasant, or cigarette-related. The goal was to see if smoke

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Jun 07 2026SCIENCE

Yaks and Cattle: Who Wins at the Top of the World?

Yaks thrive on the Qinghai‑Tibet Plateau, where oxygen is thin and food is scarce. Scientists wanted to know how the animals’ gut bacteria help them survive. They compared yaks and ordinary cattle at two heights: 2, 200 m and 3, 800 m. The rumen is the biggest stomach of a ruminant and houses mil

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Jun 07 2026BUSINESS

Border Trade Block, Beef Surge: Mexico Gains While Texas Stumbles

The United States and Mexico have seen a surprising shift in their cattle trade after the U. S. halted imports from Mexico to stop the spread of screwworm, a fly that bites and can kill livestock. The move left many U. S. feedlots, like Lubbock Feeders in Texas, without the cattle they used to bring

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Jun 07 2026TECHNOLOGY

A New Way to Recycle Old Batteries Without Wasting Energy

Every year, millions of lithium iron phosphate batteries end up in landfills, releasing harmful chemicals and wasting valuable metals. Traditional recycling methods are slow, expensive, and often harmful to the environment. They usually involve high temperatures or harsh chemicals that don’t fully r

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Jun 07 2026HEALTH

How Exercise Keeps Your Brain Young as You Age

A big question in brain science is whether staying physically fit actually helps your brain stay young. Some studies suggest it does—but recent research digs deeper, asking if fitness levels might protect the brain’s wiring, especially in older adults. Scientists looked at over 4, 000 people aged 40

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Jun 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

The New Face of Control: A Melee‑Powered Adventure in Manhattan

Control Resonant drops its players into the shattered heart of the Federal Bureau of Control, a place once hidden behind secret doors and now littered with broken glass and danger. Instead of the high‑octane gunplay that defined Control, this game swaps bullets for blades and lets Dylan Faden swing

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