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Mar 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

AI Dreams and Murder Mysteries: A Cautionary Twist

Prime Video’s new series, based on Patricia Cornwell’s books, follows forensic pathologist Janet Scarpetta as she investigates a series of brutal killings that echo her first major case. While the show delivers tense crime drama, it takes a strange detour into artificial intelligence that feels out

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Mar 15 2026CRIME

11‑Year‑Old Accused in 5‑Year‑Old’s Death

A small town near Denver was shaken when a 5‑year‑old boy died early this week. Police entered the family home that night to investigate the fatal incident in Centennial, a suburb of Denver with fewer than 110, 000 residents. The case is being treated as a homicide. An 11‑year‑old boy from the same

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Mar 15 2026CRIME

City Downtown Traffic Drops as Crime Concerns Grow

Traffic speed data from major city roads shows that fewer people moved through downtown and the Over-the-Rhine area in summer 2025 than in the previous year. A study by a data firm found that cars traveled faster on key streets, indicating lighter traffic flows. Bus and streetcar ridership also fell

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Mar 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Designer Shares Tough Tales About Hollywood Stars

A well‑known costume artist opens up about the difficult personalities he has met on set. He says some actors were hard to work with, describing them as “unprofessional” and “disrespectful. ” The artist’s remarks paint a picture of the chaotic side of film production, where deadlines and personaliti

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Mar 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Bouncing Stars and a Last‑Second Shot

A big Saturday night saw the Lakers and Nuggets fight until overtime, ending 127–125. The game swung like a pendulum: the Lakers led by 17, then the Nuggets turned it around and briefly took seven points. With five seconds left, Austin Reaves missed a free throw but grabbed the rebound and sco

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Mar 15 2026SCIENCE

Faces in a Grid: How the Brain Picks Out Differences

The study looks at how our brains tell apart faces that look alike when many are shown together. Researchers used brain‑wave recordings called ERPs to track responses while people watched 2 × 2 grids of faces. The faces were either the same picture, different pictures of the same person, or pictures

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Mar 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

The Future of Care: When Bodies Become Symbols

Technology is blurring the lines between people and machines, turning reality into a maze of signs that can be hard to untangle. A story set in 2100, deep beneath the sea, shows how this confusion can shape medical treatment. The tale follows Momo, a 30‑year‑old transgender star who works as a skin‑

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Mar 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Time‑Travel, Gangs, and Comedy: A New Twist on Classic Sci‑Fi

A fresh film drops on Hulu and Disney+ that mixes old‑school gangsters with a time‑travel plot. Two criminals, Nick and Mike, find themselves stuck in a wild night when a mysterious machine takes them back and forth through time. The twist is that Nick, played by Vince Vaughn, shows up twice—once as

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Mar 15 2026SCIENCE

Science Day at Willow Bend Turns Into a Treasure Hunt

Willow Bend’s annual Science Saturday has become a lively hunt for hidden relics, drawing families and curious minds to the park’s winding paths. The event opens with a brief welcome that explains how participants can search for small artifacts buried in the soil, each item linked to a story about l

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Mar 15 2026SCIENCE

Speedy Speech Can Boost How Smart You Seem

People who can persuade others often do so by sounding smart. A quick way to appear more knowledgeable is to raise your speaking speed just a bit. Research in Language and Speech found that listeners judge someone as more competent when they talk faster, but not too fast. Another study in t

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