
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.

It's one of the most-shared facts about ancient Egypt: women were considered goddesses because they could create life. The real story is more interesting than the meme. Ancient Egyptian women were not literally worshipped as deities. But the connection between womanhood, creation, and the divine ran deep in Egyptian belief — embodied in goddesses like Isis, Hathor, and Maat, who represented motherhood, magic, and cosmic balance. That symbolism helped shape something rare for the ancient world: women in Egypt could own property, sign contracts, appear in court, and even rule as pharaoh in their own right. This is what ancient Egyptian society actually believed about women — and why their status was so far ahead of its time. Read the full story below.

Before Shrek was a green movie icon with Mike Myers' voice and a donkey sidekick, he was something else entirely. In 1990, author and illustrator William Steig published Shrek! — a picture book that inspired the entire franchise but bears almost no resemblance to the films most people grew up with. The tone is stranger, the artwork is rougher, and the story takes turns the movie never touches. A viral post comparing the two has people asking the same question: how did this become that? Here's what the original Shrek story actually looks like — and how it became one of the biggest animated franchises in the world. Read the full story below.

Kyle Bevan was one of the most reviled men in Britain — convicted of murdering his partner's two-year-old daughter, Lola James, in a case that shocked the country. In November 2025, he was found dead in his cell at HMP Wakefield, one of the UK's highest-security prisons. Three fellow inmates are now on trial at Leeds Crown Court, accused of his murder. The trial, which began this month, is expected to run for several more weeks. All three men deny the charge. This is what we know so far — and what it reveals about life inside one of Britain's most notorious prisons. Read the full story below.

Some coincidences are easy to dismiss. This one is not. Mary Ashford and Barbara Forrest were born on the same day — 157 years apart. On the last night of their lives, both met a friend, put on a brand new dress, and went to a dance. Both were killed the same way, in the same location. And both of their killers shared the same surname — Thornton. Both men were acquitted. Same birthday. Same final night. Same location. Same method. Same killer's name. Same verdict. The probability of that chain of coincidences occurring twice in history is something statisticians struggle to calculate. The fact that it happened is not in dispute. This is the story of two women, two murders, and one of the most haunting historical mysteries that true crime has ever produced. Read the full story below.

In Malawi, becoming a chief is a man's world. Or at least, it used to be. When Malawi's first female Ngoni chief took her seat, she did not wait to be accepted. She got to work. In three years, she has personally dissolved 850 child marriages — returning girls to school, to their families, and to childhoods that were being taken from them before they had barely begun. No legislation. No international task force. One woman, one community, and the authority to say: not here, not anymore. This is what leadership looks like when it actually serves the people it is supposed to protect. Read the full story below.

While male characters are granted the human agency to be violent out of simple greed or malice, cinema frequently hits a psychological wall when it comes to women. The film Obsession proves a bizarre double standard: to make a female antagonist exhibit the same baseline level of violence as an average man, the narrative must invoke the ultimate extremes of demonic possession and magic spells.
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