celebrities
It can be hard to keep up with celebrity relationship low-down, but we certainly try.
The Song Nobody Else Can Hear 🎵
THE FREQUENCY OF CONNECTION 🎶 Mia Park was born with a neurological condition called autonomous sensory meridian response that in her case manifested not as the typical tingling sensations most ASMR experiencers describe but as the perception of a faint continuous melody that only she could hear, a personal soundtrack that shifted in tempo, key, and emotional quality based on her proximity to certain people and certain environments, and for most of her life she assumed this internal music was a form of tinnitus or auditory hallucination and she mentioned it to no one because hearing music that nobody else can hear is the kind of symptom that gets you referred to psychiatrists and she had no interest in being medicated out of something that while unexplainable was not unpleasant, just strange and private and hers alone 🎵
By The Curious Writerabout 3 hours ago in Humans
World Cup chaos as FIFA ticket blunder traps fans in wrong queue while seats vanish
Soccer fans trying to get their hands on FIFA World Cup 2026 tickets were having a perfectly normal Wednesday morning — right up until FIFA, an organization that has had decades to figure out how to sell tickets, spectacularly failed to sell tickets.
By Shirley Oyiadoma day ago in Humans
Why Todd Bridges Files for Divorce
When news broke that Todd Bridges had officially filed for divorce from Bettijo Hirschi, it wasn’t just another celebrity breakup—it was a story layered with emotion, timing, financial tension, and the realities of modern relationships.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukuna day ago in Humans
The Bookmark
A Love Story Written Between the Pages THE FIRST BOOKMARK đź”– Sophie discovered the first bookmark three weeks after moving into her new apartment when she unpacked a box of secondhand books she had purchased from the estate sale down the street, and tucked between pages 142 and 143 of a worn copy of "Pride and Prejudice" was a small rectangular piece of cardstock with neat handwriting that read "If you're reading this, you remind me of Elizabeth Bennet which means you're probably stubborn and brilliant and I would have liked to argue with you about whether Darcy deserved her" and the note was unsigned but dated March 2019, and Sophie who had just ended a three-year relationship with a man who had never once asked what she was reading and who considered her book collection a waste of space felt something shift in her chest at the idea of a stranger who left love letters in books for unknown future readers to find, someone who understood that the intimacy of reading is one of the most personal acts a human can perform and that the books you love reveal more about who you are than any dating profile ever could đź“–đź’•
By The Curious Writera day ago in Humans
Trump mocks Macron for being slapped by his wife as he uses Iran war TV address to condemn Europe
Not a diplomatic one — a literal one. Or at least, that's how Donald Trump tells it. At an Easter lunch inside the White House, just hours before addressing the American nation on live television, the President of the United States stood before a laughing crowd and did his best Emmanuel Macron impression — complete with a mock French accent and a jab at the French First Lady.
By Shirley Oyiadom2 days ago in Humans
AI as a Reflective Surface
Much of the confusion surrounding artificial intelligence comes from treating it as an agent rather than a surface. When people speak about AI “doing the thinking,” “creating the ideas,” or “speaking for someone,” they are often projecting agency onto a system that does not possess intention, belief, or understanding. This projection obscures what is actually happening in many real-world uses. In those cases, AI is not acting as a source of meaning, but as a surface that reflects, redirects, and reshapes what is already present.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Humans
Why Saying Less Makes Words Feel More Valuable
There is a widely held belief that words gain value through scarcity. When someone speaks rarely, their statements are treated as weightier, more deliberate, and more worth attending to. When someone speaks often, their words are assumed to be interchangeable, disposable, or less carefully considered. This intuition is not entirely wrong, but it is frequently misapplied. Scarcity does affect perception, but perception is not the same as truth, and rarity is not the same as meaning.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Humans
The Apology That Actually Works
THE ANATOMY OF A FAKE APOLOGY The most common form of apology in modern relationships is not actually an apology at all but rather a linguistic sleight of hand that shifts responsibility from the person who caused harm to the person who was harmed, and the phrase "I'm sorry you feel that way" has become so ubiquitous that most people do not recognize it as the manipulation it actually is, because it contains the word sorry which creates the appearance of accountability while the phrase "you feel that way" redirects responsibility onto the injured party by framing the problem as their emotional reaction rather than the behavior that caused it, essentially saying your feelings are the problem here not what I did, and this non-apology not only fails to repair the damage but actively compounds it because the injured person now has two injuries to process, the original harm plus the dismissal and invalidation of their response to it.
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Humans
THE PLAYLIST IN YOUR HEAD
The Neuroscience of Musical Memory and What It Reveals About Your Brain THE PLAYLIST IN YOUR HEAD You cannot remember what you had for lunch three days ago, you forget people's names within seconds of hearing them, you walk into rooms and cannot recall why you went there, and you struggle to retain information from books and lectures despite genuine effort to learn, but you can sing every word of a song you have not heard in twenty years, reproducing lyrics, melody, rhythm, and even the emotional quality of the original performance with accuracy that would be impossible for any other type of information stored for the same duration, and this dramatic disparity between your terrible general memory and your extraordinary musical memory reveals something profound about how your brain processes, stores, and retrieves information that has practical implications far beyond music for anyone who wants to learn more effectively, remember more reliably, and understand why certain experiences become permanently encoded while others vanish within hours.
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Humans
Michael Schumacher, seven-time F1 world champion. The real state of the day
Youth and the Start of a Career He was born on January 3, 1969. His father put him in a go-kart at the age of four, as part of his reward for working on a go-kart track, he was given a membership for his son. When Michael was 12 years old, he wanted to start for the first time at the official German Championships. Riders over the age of 14 could take off here, but his father got him the necessary permits.
By Tomáš Dědourek5 days ago in Humans







