ME

May 05 2026POLITICS

Ruling Holds: Abortion Pill by Mail Stays Legal—for Now

The Supreme Court just hit pause on a Louisiana court’s decision to ban abortion pills sent through the mail. For now, people can still get mifepristone via telehealth and receive it without stepping into a clinic. But this isn’t a final win—it’s just a temporary hold while the justices think it ove

reading time less than a minute
May 05 2026TECHNOLOGY

The projector that outshines daylight with cleaner colors

Most projectors struggle with brightness and rainbow-like distortions in bright rooms. The VisionMaster Max, however, solves both issues. It delivers sharp 4K visuals even when the sun is up, something rare among laser projectors. A special mode removes those annoying color halos that make some view

reading time less than a minute
May 05 2026BUSINESS

Pop Mart’s plan to ride the Labubu wave with its Beijing theme park

Pop Mart brought its Beijing theme park back online earlier this month, making a bold bet on the Labubu series. The tiny vinyl figures—once a quiet corner of the toy aisle—have exploded into a global craze, landing everywhere from street stalls to high-end collabs. Instead of playing it safe, the co

reading time less than a minute
May 05 2026CRIME

Police activity at Woodford Street home raises questions

A quiet Portland neighborhood turned into a hive of activity on Monday when police arrived at a local group home just before noon. Emergency responders quickly moved residents out of the building using a fire truck’s ladder after an incident unfolded inside. The house at 503 Woodford Street belongs

reading time less than a minute
May 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Season two of the Nordic crime drama steps up with deeper characters and sharper fear

Five years after its first season gave viewers the chills, the Danish crime show returns with a fresh mystery that ditches the wooden dolls and trades them for high-tech fear. Instead of leaving physical clues, the new villain uses a scary nursery rhyme and digital stalking to unnerve victims long b

reading time less than a minute
May 05 2026SPORTS

How a quiet star led the Cavaliers through a wild Game 7

Jarrett Allen wasn’t the flashiest name when Cleveland faced elimination against Toronto. He’s the kind of player who makes others look good—setting hard screens, grabbing rebounds, and finishing quietly at the rim. But when the Cavaliers needed someone to step up in Game 7, Allen didn’t just play—h

reading time less than a minute
May 04 2026SPORTS

Cleveland Faces the Final Test: A Game 7 of Grit and Home‑Court Advantage

The Cavs are heading to Rocket Arena for a Game 7 against the Raptors, but this match has changed in meaning after Saturday’s results. The bracket is already open; the Celtics, who were expected to reach the finals, lost to the 76ers. Although Boston’s loss had its own circumstances—missing Jayson T

reading time less than a minute
May 04 2026ENTERTAINMENT

The Killing’s Unexpected Second Life on Netflix

The Killing started as a 2011 AMC crime series that adapted the Danish hit Forbrydelsen. Its first two seasons kept viewers hooked with a dark atmosphere and strong chemistry between detectives Sarah Linden and Stephen Holder. After the murder case of Rosie Larsen closed, AMC decided to cancel the s

reading time less than a minute
May 04 2026CRYPTO

Investing in Buildings Made Simple: A New Token Game

A new platform called Smart Props Solution (SPS) is changing how people buy and earn money from real estate. It uses blockchain technology to split big properties into small, tradeable pieces called tokens. Anyone can buy a token for as little as $100 in cash or cryptocurrency, which makes property

reading time less than a minute
May 04 2026HEALTH

Sunlight and Stomach Health: A Bright Idea for Lower Cancer Risk

Daytime sunshine plays a key role in keeping our bodies’ internal clocks ticking smoothly. When we don’t get enough natural light, these rhythms can become out of sync, and that may raise the chance of serious illnesses like cancer. A large study followed almost 90, 000 adults for nearly nine years,

reading time less than a minute