ULT

Jun 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

HBO’s Long‑Running Crime Masterpiece and a New Mystery

The crime drama that has dominated HBO’s lineup for years is a show so influential that its creator has rarely returned to television. HBO, while not the first to produce high‑quality TV, quickly became known for daring stories that network stations avoided. The network’s early successes, like the s

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

How Fun Exercise Helps Older People Stay Strong

Older adults often lose muscle power and the ability to move well. These losses can lead to many health problems, but scientists are still figuring out how everyday fun activities affect different parts of fitness. A new study looked at people who live in the community and are not in hospitals or

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Jun 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Laughs and Screams: How a Spoof Became a Time Capsule

The original “Scary Movie” kicked off in 2000, taking a sharp jab at the teen slasher craze of the 1990s. It stitched together moments from hits like “Scream” and “I Know What You Did Last Summer, ” turning familiar horror clichés into punchlines. The film mocked the clueless killer, the overly sexu

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Jun 08 2026SCIENCE

Drought‑Smart Sorghum: How Photosynthesis Helps Plants Stay Dry

Sorghum plants in central Arizona were watched for seven weeks while the soil dried out. Scientists measured how much water the plants used, looked at their genes, and checked for stress signals. They found a group of genes that act together when the plants are thirsty. One gene, called SbC

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

Cutting More Than Hair: Why Barbershops Are Saving Spaces for Young Men of Color

For many young men of color—especially Black students—the barbershop isn’t just about sharp fades and fresh lines. It’s a meeting spot where ideas flow as freely as the clippers buzz. A Connecticut university turned this familiar space into a structured support system called Barbershop Talks—where f

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Jun 08 2026LIFESTYLE

The real reasons young adults in Turkey choose cinema over other pastimes

A large survey of over 1, 100 university students from twelve cities shows cinema is still mostly a group activity for this generation. Instead of seeing movies as a way to escape loneliness, most students said they go to laugh and chat with friends afterwards. The big screens and surround sound als

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Jun 08 2026SPORTS

Race Day in New Hampshire Faces Storms but Still Delivers Big Wins

Heavy rain disrupted racing plans at New England Dragway but didn’t stop fans from seeing impressive performances across multiple classes. Dallas Glenn took the Pro Stock win in a tight finish, beating Matt Hartford by just seven thousandths of a second. The race showcased how close professional dra

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Jun 08 2026LIFESTYLE

Danish crowds go wild for the wildest hairstyle contest

In Denmark, the mullet isn’t just a hairstyle—it’s a full-blown celebration. Every year, Copenhagen hosts one of the most chaotic hair events on the planet: a championship devoted entirely to the short-front, long-back ’do. This year, twelve brave souls took the stage, each flaunting their own twist

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Jun 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why fame feels stuck on repeat

Back in the mid-2000s, a TV show mocked Hollywood’s obsession with fading stars desperate for attention. The joke landed hard—until real life started copying the script too closely. By the time the show returned years later, the punchline didn’t feel funny anymore. It felt like watching someone trip

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Jun 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

TV shows that shaped science fiction forever

Science fiction on TV started as fun space adventures for kids but grew into deep stories for grown-ups. Shows like Captain Video in 1949 showed robots and rockets long before real space travel. Others like Flash Gordon and Superman made science fiction feel exciting yet familiar. These early shows

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