
After a lengthy four-hour Zoning Commission meeting in Greensboro, North Carolina, Dr. Carrie Rosario made a straightforward request: she simply wanted to be addressed by her name. "It's Dr. Rosario, thank you, sir," she stated. However, zoning commissioner Tony Collins brushed her off. She tried to correct him again, but he continued to ignore her. When she pointed out, "I wouldn't call you Tony, so please, sir, call me as I would like to be called," Collins replied dismissively, "It doesn't really matter." But it did matter. The very next day, the Greensboro City Council voted unanimously to remove Collins from the Zoning Commission. Dr. Rosario, a 38-year-old associate professor at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro with a doctorate in public health, believes that what she experienced that night is a common occurrence for Black women with doctoral degrees. She emphasizes that the title itself was never the main issue. Read the full story below.

Argentina has given U.S. authorities a list of about 13,000 parents—mostly fathers—who are behind on their court-ordered child support payments, requesting that they be banned from attending matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Buenos Aires Mayor Jorge Macri laid it out plainly: "Those who neglect a responsibility as crucial as providing for their children must face the consequences. If they can't support their kids, they won't be allowed in the stadium." This policy isn't something new; it's been in place at Argentine stadiums since March 2025. What’s different now is the push to apply it during an entire World Cup held on foreign soil. It’s still uncertain whether the U.S. will follow through on this request. Here’s what we know about how the policy operates and why it’s sparking mixed reactions. Read the full story below.

Tickets for Olivia Dean's North American tour went on sale — and within hours, resellers were listing them at more than 14 times face value, with some surpassing $1,000. Dean did not stay quiet. In an open letter, she called the unchecked resale market "disgusting," "vile," and fundamentally "exploitative," urging Ticketmaster, Live Nation, and AEG to "BE BETTER". Days later, the ticketing giant backed down. Ticketmaster activated its Face Value Exchange for Dean's tour, capping all future resale prices at face value and refunding fans who had already paid above the original cost. Here is the full story of how one artist's Instagram post turned into a public reckoning for the live music industry's resale problem. Read the full story below.

"Biological limits are real, but digital potential is infinite." That is what Jeff Bezos told a packed audience at VivaTech 2026 in Paris — and it is the line that has since ignited a fierce online debate. Speaking about the resources required to power AI data centers, Bezos argued that human water consumption may need to take a back seat to the cooling needs of AI infrastructure. "Sometimes you've got to prioritise intelligence that will save us over biology," Bezos said, framing the trade-off as a necessary step toward a future where advanced AI could solve the very resource problems its development creates. Critics were quick to push back, calling the logic circular — and, for many watching from water-stressed regions, deeply tone-deaf. Here is the full quote, the context behind it, and why it has people talking. Read the full story below.

It was the fourth break-in that month. In January 2012, 24-year-old Anthony Omari woke up to find armed intruders inside Faraja Children's Home in Ngong, Kenya — the orphanage he ran with his mother, home to 37 sleeping children. He had a choice: run, or stay and fight. He grabbed a hammer from under his bed and charged. He drove the attackers outside. As he turned back to calm the terrified children, one of the men struck him across the face with a machete. Bleeding heavily, Omari still managed to lock the front door before collapsing. He needed 11 stitches and was left with a scar running from his forehead to his cheek. Two days later, he checked himself out of the hospital and went back to the orphanage. He refused to leave the children unprotected. This is his story. Read the full story below.

In September 2015, a 22-year-old German model named Michele left her family home with a suitcase. She has not been heard from since. For nearly eleven years, her family had no leads, no answers, and no closure. That changed when the United States Department of Justice released the Epstein files — and Michele's name appeared in them. According to reporting by Der Spiegel and public broadcaster ZDF, Michele's name surfaced in emails between model scout Daniel Siad and Jeffrey Epstein, dated a year before she disappeared. Siad is currently under investigation in France, accused of aiding Epstein in trafficking and abusing women. He denies all accusations. There is no proof Michele ever met Epstein. But for her mother, the discovery has only deepened her worst fears. Read the full story below.

For more than a century, one of the most common hormone disorders in the world has had the wrong name. Polycystic ovary syndrome — PCOS — has officially been renamed polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome, or PMOS. The change, published in The Lancet, comes after 14 years of global collaboration involving 56 organizations and input from over 22,000 patients and health professionals. The problem with the old name was fundamental. The "cysts" it refers to are not actually cysts — they are arrested ovarian follicles, and some patients do not even have them. Worse, the name reduced a complex, multisystem hormonal condition to a single organ, contributing to decades of misdiagnosis and overlooked metabolic risk. Here is what the new name actually means, and why it matters for the 170 million women living with the condition. Read the full story below.
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