My cat bit into my laptop
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Thereโs a certain kind of television episode that doesnโt feel old. Not because it aged well, but because it never stopped aging. It keeps mutating, like a radioactive metaphor buried in a salt mine that still leaks into the water supply. Thatโs what The Brain Center at Whippleโs is.
[Read more…] about Rod Serling Warned Us About AI in 1964. We Didnโt Listen.

Sheโs standing on the side of a dirt road. Her clothes are torn. Her face is bruised. Her hair is matted, filthy, falling in clumps. She is not armed. She is not a soldier. She is maybe 16. Maybe younger. And she is utterly alone.
They call her โThe Lost German Girl.โ
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This September 1862 photo provided by the Library of Congress shows Allan Pinkerton on horseback during the Battle of Antietam, near Sharpsburg, Maryland. Before the outbreak of war, he had founded the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. In 1861, he famously foiled an alleged plot to assassinate president-elect Lincoln, and later served as the head of the Union Intelligence Service — the forerunner of the U.S. Secret Service.

They found him alone.
January 8th, 1943. Room 3327 of the New Yorker Hotel. The chambermaid knocked. No answer. She let herself in and discovered the body of a man who had once dreamed of lighting up the entire planet. Nikola Tesla was dead. Eighty-six years old, broke, and virtually forgotten by the world he had helped shape.

[Read more…] about Lets Take A Stroll Through The Art Museum

Soโฆ whoโs actually buying homes in L.A. right now?
We came across a fascinating Reddit thread where one user asked a simple question: โWho here has bought a house in L.A. in the past three years? Where, and what do you do for work?โ
Twenty-four Angelenos chimed in with honest, detailed answers. They shared where they bought, what kind of home they landed, and what they do for a living to make it all work.
The result is a rare glimpse into what it really takes to become a homeowner in one of the most expensive cities in the country. Some buyers are in tech or law. Others are nurses, artists, engineers, or self-employed. A few had help from family. Some scrimped and saved for years. A few even surprised us.
If youโve ever looked around and wondered, โHow are people affording houses here?โโthis is your answer.

They called it a depression. But for millions of Americans, it felt more like a free fall.
No safety net. No work. No food. Just dust, desperation, and the distant hope that tomorrow might be better.
And standing quietly behind a large-format camera was Dorothea Lange, an American documentary photographer whose lens would go on to define this era. Originally a portrait photographer in San Francisco, Lange pivoted during the 1930sโleaving the studio behind to capture the streets, fields, and migrant camps where the pain of the Great Depression lived.
[Read more…] about These Haunting Photos Captured the True Face of the Great Depression
