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May 02 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Gizmoplex to Close After Three Years of Serving MST3K Fans

A niche streaming service built for fans of Mystery Science Theater 3000 is closing its doors after just three years. Gizmoplex offered a way for supporters to watch classic episodes and newer original content. For those who backed recent Kickstarter campaigns, the service was the easiest way to cla

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May 02 2026SPORTS

Nebraska softball faces last-minute delay before big game

A Nebraska softball team prepared for a tough match against Penn State last weekend, only for the game to be called off due to sudden weather changes. The decision wasn’t made quietly—players and coaches had to adjust quickly as dark clouds rolled in, forcing organizers to postpone the event without

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May 02 2026HEALTH

Hungary’s suicide rates and the role of religion: what’s really behind the numbers?

For decades, Hungary has stood out in Europe for having unusually high suicide rates. But why? Between 2000 and 2022, researchers dug into the connection between where people live, what they believe, and how often they end their lives. The findings suggest that in regions where many people practice

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May 02 2026POLITICS

Forced Marriage Takes Center Stage in Global Justice Talks

Countries are pushing to make forced marriage a clear crime under international law. This move follows years of court rulings that already called it a crime against humanity. Judges in Sierra Leone, Cambodia, and the International Criminal Court have all ruled on cases where people were forced into

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May 01 2026POLITICS

Alarming Claims: What Is Really Happening at the Kwara Camp?

Amnesty International has urged Nigerian authorities to look into reports that at least 150 people, many of them children, may have died in an army‑run camp located in Yikpata, Kwara state. The group says the victims were part of a community of about 1, 500 Fulani who were relocated after facing inc

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May 01 2026POLITICS

What Americans Really Believe About Human Rights—and Why It Matters

A growing number of Americans now see certain authoritarian governments as better on human rights than their own country. Polls show this shift is especially strong among younger Democrats, who view Iran, Israel, and even China in similar negative ways—or sometimes even favor China over the U. S. Th

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May 01 2026POLITICS

When Art Meets Politics: What Happened at Venice’s Big Show?

A major shake-up hit the Venice Art Biennale just days before its grand opening. Days after the event’s five-member jury decided to skip awarding prizes to artists from Russia and Israel—citing human rights concerns—the entire panel quit in protest over what they saw as unfair treatment of certain c

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May 01 2026POLITICS

Why Iran’s Soccer Team Should Skip the World Cup

Outside FIFA’s meeting in Vancouver, a small but determined group of Iranians made their voices heard. They argue the country’s soccer squad doesn’t belong at the World Cup—not because the players lack skill, but because they see the team as a tool of a government many Iranians reject. Protesters wa

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Apr 30 2026WEATHER

Rain Arrives in New Jersey, Bringing Relief from Drought

New Jersey will see a spread of rain starting in the west by late Wednesday afternoon and moving east toward the coast early Thursday. The showers could drop between a quarter inch and three‑quarters of an inch, giving much-needed moisture to the state. Around the same time, isolated thunderstorm

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Apr 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

Why AI faces stick in your memory more than real ones

A new study looked at how well people remember faces made by computers compared to real human faces. Participants saw both types and later tried to recall which was which. The results showed something odd: AI faces were easier to remember. This wasn’t just because people could tell them apart—they a

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