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Jun 15 2026HEALTH

Pet Food, Vaccines, and Cancer in Pets: What’s Really Going On?

A century ago, cancer in pets was rare—just one dog in 100 and one cat in 300 faced it. Today, those numbers have flipped dramatically. Now, nearly one in every two dogs and one in three cats will develop cancer in their lifetime. The big question isn’t about genetics; dogs and cats haven’t evolved

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Jun 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Funny Crime Show That’s Beating the Odds

A low-budget crime comedy about Pakistani-American life is quietly becoming one of Hulu’s biggest hits. The show, which mixes sharp humor with gangster-style storytelling, has already proven itself with critics and viewers. Its first season climbed into the platform’s top ten most-watched list, and

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Jun 15 2026CRIME

A judge’s words spark debate after teen killer’s sentencing

A Texas judge faced backlash for calling a convicted teen murderer a “nice kid” after sentencing him to 35 years behind bars. The 19-year-old, once a high school athlete, stabbed a rival student to death at a track meet in 2025. The judge’s comment came during an interview where he also defended ban

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Jun 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Behind the Screen: A Single Mom, Webcams, and Crime

Paula thought her biggest problem was balancing childcare with a full-time job checking facts for a newspaper. Then she watched Trevor, a man she met streaming live, get attacked during a private show. That moment changed everything. While diving into his case, she stumbles into a messy world of ill

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Jun 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A crime show that mixed real life and cartoons in two countries

Tokyo and London aren’t the first places that come to mind for the same crime drama. Yet one series decided to merge their streets, their stories, and their styles into one wild experiment. The show didn’t just copy police cases from one city to another—it stitched them together like mismatched fabr

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Jun 15 2026CRIME

Downtown LA struggles to keep up with other major city centers

Los Angeles’ downtown district has landed at the bottom of global rankings for vibrancy and beauty, according to a recent urban study. While cities like Madrid and Chicago score high for lively downtowns with active nightlife and engaged communities, LA’s central area falls short. Surveys reveal onl

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Jun 15 2026OPINION

When AI companies face tough choices

Tech companies today often talk about doing good with AI. But real courage comes when they have to turn down big money for the wrong reasons. One AI firm, Anthropic, recently did something bold. It refused a Pentagon demand to remove limits on how its AI tools could be used. This happened when the

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Jun 15 2026FINANCE

Tech Stocks Worth Watching in 2026

Investing in tech stocks isn’t about betting on today’s hottest gadgets. It’s about spotting companies that adapt fast. Some tech giants thrive on change, while others get left behind. But the good news? The market’s big enough for multiple winners. Smart investing isn’t about guesswork. It’s about

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Jun 15 2026POLITICS

Swiss voters say no to population cap plan

Switzerland just held a big vote on whether to set a hard limit of 10 million people in the country, a move pushed hard by the biggest party in government. The idea was simple: cap growth to protect Swiss life. But voters across the 26 cantons didn’t buy it. Nearly 54 percent rejected the plan, even

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Jun 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

Looking back at tech that really felt like the future

Back in the 60s and 70s, gadgets weren't just tools. They were dreams come true. Household items like TVs and refrigerators were built to last decades, not years. Imagine using the same family fridge for your whole childhood. That kind of durability made every new gadget feel revolutionary. Today's

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