Few public figures of the 20th century were — and remain — as instantly recognizable to literally billions of people around the globe as Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869 – 1948). Albert Einstein, JFK, Martin Luther King, Jr. — there is a kind of evocative power in the most famous pictures of these men that immediately calls to mind not only the era in which they lived, but the words and deeds that made them so memorable.
June 6, 2014 12:48 PM EDT
Grab some Twinkies: In honor of its 30th anniversary, Ghostbusters will be re-released in theaters for one day only on August 29.
That’s right, it’s been 30 years since the hilarious and delightfully ridiculous cinematic adventure first unfolded, and now, 700 theaters have agreed to revive it, Entertainment Weekly reports. The anniversary celebration will also feature special events, collectible merchandise and a new Blu-ray release.
When I stepped foot on Harvard’s campus in the fall of 2022, I found myself to be a foreigner among the student body. Pristine, elite, and doused in money, Harvard seemed to be most of my peers’ territory—their destiny even. They were well-versed in the institution’s hidden curriculum—Harvard’s vast connections, fellowships, and affluent social networks that low-income communities have not been privy to—and thus, were well-equipped to navigate academic and social life.
When you check out the post, you'll notice the same big shoulders, same massive arms, and the same beat up Kansas City Chiefs hat that Superman sports in most of his gym posts. What's different here is the weight Cavill is hoisting in his curl. Those low-profile dumbbells look to be a lot smaller than what those guns could easily carry. Unless they're secretly lined with kryptonite, it's tough for the casual observer to understand why such an unimpressive pic warrants the share.
He’s caring, sensitive, and God-fearing. Deep in your heart you are sure he is the one. But he hasn’t proposed yet and you are starting to doubt his good intentions. Perhaps he just wants to chop and clean mouth? Or maybe he is married? Could he be planning a wedding with someone else? ADVERTISEMENT
Well, fret no more, he just might be thinking about that same thing too!
Inside Out fans last saw 11-year-old Riley—and Joy, Fear, Sadness, Anger, and Disgust, a.k.a. the five core emotions in the headquarters of her brain—finally accept her feelings in the conclusion to Pixar’s beloved, Oscar-winning 2015 film. In return, she received a brand new “expanded console” control board. On it flashed a red emergency light labeled “Puberty.” ”What’s “Poo-berty?” asks Disgust. “It’s probably not important,” says Joy.
Two Pixar years later—or nine years in real time—Riley is 13 and puberty is proving pretty important indeed in Inside Out 2, a sequel by Dave Holstein and Meg LeFauve out June 14.
Ikea is assembling a team of Roblox players to work at its virtual store—and you can even get paid for the job.
The Swedish retailer announced in a press release Monday that it will be launching “The Co-Worker Game,” a virtual recreation of the store that will be available on Roblox on June 24. Ikea is hiring 10 paid workers for the virtual store. Applications opened Monday and will remain up until June 16.
With the success of long-format cult-exposé documentaries such as Hulu’s “Stolen Youth,” HBO’s “The Vow” and Netflix’s “Wild Wild Country,” it’s not surprising that both Amazon and Netflix greenlit competing docuseries about Twin Flames Universe – an alleged online love cult run by YouTube influencers Jeff and Shaleia Divine.
Amazon’s “Desperately Seeking Soulmate: Escaping Twin Flames Universe” is being released on Oct. 6, a month before Netflix’s “Escaping Twin Flames.
But Mark just revealed to Andy Cohen on Watch What Happens Live that the couple once hit a bump in the road on their way to happily ever after. The smoking-hot couple met on the set of the soap opera All My Children and started secretly dating soon after. But apparently, Mark and Kelly broke up around a year later in 1996-literally right before they eloped in Las Vegas.
An armed school resource officer confronted and exchanged gunfire with a school shooter Tuesday morning, less than a minute after the student wounded a female student, with whom he had a prior relationship, and another classmate at Great Mills High School in southern Maryland, police say.
The suspected gunman — who authorities identified as 17-year-old Austin Wyatt Rollins — died at a hospital after being confronted by the school resource officer, Deputy First Class Blaine Gaskill.