It is a new year. Can you believe it is 2026? I still remember listening to Prince’s hit song 1999. As a kid I could not believe how far away that was from the 1980s into the 1990s. I remember ...
On New Year’s Eve an overwhelming number of people will gather at Times Square to see the ball drop at midnight. For them (like for everyone else) 2025 will fade away into history and 2026 will begin ...
You lived through a time when patience mattered: waiting for dial-up, rewinding VHS, and crafting the perfect mix tape took effort—and now those small rituals land differently when you’re over 30. You ...
I haven’t made New Year’s Eve plans, but I know I won’t be sitting in an old building across from the state Capitol waiting for all the computers in the world to fall apart and destroy civilization as ...
As 2025 comes to an end, I was reflecting on how much the world has changed in the last 25 years. 2026 marks the end of the first quarter of the 21st century and the differences in the world today ...
From all the low-rise jeans to the chainmail tops, the 2000s were a wild time in fashion. Yet there may be no trend that better defines that lawless era than layering a dress over jeans. At the height ...
Publisher tinyBuild and I Am Future developer Mandragora have announced ReStory, a simulation game that lets you run your own electronics repair shop in Y2K-era Japan. It will launch for PC via Steam ...
Yesterday, Tyla—exciting pop star, equally-exciting fashion star—was spotted touching down at an airport in Mumbai, India. Her off-duty outfit had all the makings of a great (and cozy) plane outfit: ...
Back in the day, standard-issue Oregon license plates were in the format ABC 123, but we used them all up. Now we’re nearly through Q of the 123 ABC plates. What will we do once we get to 999 ZZZ? Go ...
The skeletons are taller, the witches seem to be more lifelike and the blood and gore is more plentiful. Credit... Supported by By Alyson Krueger Visuals by OK McCausland On a recent Sunday evening, ...
The angst of nu metal is being discovered by Gen Z, but with digital eyes always looming, the ephemeral catharsis of collectively going mad is a thing of the past. Credit...Illustration by Trevor Shin ...