Lately, Camila Cabello news has been mostly dating rumors, as she’s been linked to Drake, Playboi Carti, and Rauw Alejandro in recent months. More than tabloid fodder, though, Cabello is one of our brightest pop stars. She’s also due for a new album: She has three albums to her name so far and they were all released about two years apart from each other. Her latest, Familia, came out in April 2022, so if the math maths, a new one might be on the way in the near future.
Is Camila Cabello releasing a new album in 2024?
It sure looks like it.
Cabello wrapped up her 2023 yesterday (December 28) with a series of Instagram Story posts looking back on her year. Some of the pics seemed to hint at what’s to come: One photo is a POV shot of her in a studio, another is a “productivity graph” drawn on a whiteboard, and one is a text to her mother that says “it’s slutty but it’s art” (her take on her new music, perhaps?).
The most telling Story, though, is a selfie with a microphone, which she captioned, “mostly the year of this [zippered mouth emoji] see you next year b*tches.”
It was a relatively quiet year on the music front (in terms of releases) for Cabello, although she did have a voice role in the movie Trolls Band Together.
It’s officially champagne time. New Year’s Eve is when we pop the most corks. There’s just something about the soft rich bubbles of a good French wine that feels special, rejuvenating, and celebratory. As with most things beer, wine, and spirits these days though, there’s a ton of champagne on the shelf — and it is not all created equal. So to save you from grabbing a sub-par bottle of champers, we’re calling out 12 bottles that are guaranteed to put a smile on your face as the ball drops.
Below, we’re calling out the real-deal bubbly. This is the sparkling white and rose wine from Champagne, France. You can pop prosecco or your local sparkling wines during the hot summer months. New Year’s Eve calls for the good stuff. But as I mentioned above, there’s so much French sparkling wine on the shelf right now that you can easily grab some shitty bottles too. The 12 bottles of champagne that we’ve listed below will help you avoid that.
The nuance there is the flavor profiles. There’s also the issue of the depth of those profiles — which can range from light and airy to “holy shit, where has this been all of my life!?!” So we’ve ranked these 12 champagnes. Our advice is to read through our professional tasting notes, find the bottles of champagne that speak to you, and then hit those price links to get some bottles delivered. Let’s dive in!
This champagne might be the most representative of the region in a single bottle. Nicolas Feuillatte is more of a collective (or union) of 100 individual winemakers and 82 winemaking cooperatives covering over 5,000 vineyards around Champagne, France. That equates to Feuillatte pulling its juice from a swath of vineyards that cover around 7% of the wine grown in the region.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a sense of dry breadiness next to ripe apricots and peaches that draws you in on the nose before a light flutter of clay dirt sneaks in on the back end.
Palate: The body is effervescent and full of bubbles that burst with orchard-pitted fruits alongside hints of vanilla and musty cellars full of old oak barrels.
Finish: The end gets creamy with that vanilla and a twinge of fresh flowers with apricot and peach skins and pits.
Bottom Line:
This is a great (and affordable!) place to start. This wine is a crowd-pleaser and very bright. And while it’s great for sipping (especially when ice-cold), we’d recommend using this one for champagne cocktails.
Eugene Laurent and Mathilde Emilie Perrier were a husband and wife team who created the third-best-selling champagne in the world. When Laurent died, he left the whole operation to Perrier, who took the champagne worldwide and found even more success.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a beautiful balance of bright lemon citrus and very summery French florals on the nose (think fields of lavender baking in the sun).
Palate: That citrus leads towards a ripe apricot sweetness and body with a buttery underbelly that’s counter to all that dry fizz and tartness from the citrus.
Finish: The end is mellow and embraces the florals, lemon, and apricot.
Bottom Line:
Again, this is bright and airy but has that little bit more depth, which makes it very sippable. If you’re looking for a bright stroll through a fruit orchard in the spring/summer this winter, this is the wine to pour.
Taittinger blends old monastery wine-making, modern Chateau culture, and a deep history of Chardonnay grapes. The non-vintage wine leans into the Chardonnay grapes in the blend (basically, flipping on its head the ratio of Pinot to Chardonnay in the average blend), making this an outlier in the world of champagnes. The result is a nice break-from-the-norm bottle of bubbly.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a lightness that’s a bit of a trick, as the nose will tempt you with hints of peaches, buttery and yeasty brioche, summer wildflowers, and a whisper of vanilla.
Palate: The palate holds onto the stonefruit as a fresh honeycomb sweetness arrives late, bringing the whole sip together with a deep almost creamy nature of fresh butter whipped with honey, marmalade, and soft scones.
Finish: The end leans into the creamy honey vibes with a deep sense of dried apricot mixed with fatty nuts and a whisper of those wildflowers on a summer breeze.
Bottom Line:
This takes on a nice buttery depth. The finish lasts here, making this a good and bold sipper for a big meal.
Pol Roger goes back to the mid-1800s (like so many on this list). The wine was so beloved that it received a “royal warrant” to become the official champagne of the court of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. That tradition carries on today as it now has the “royal warrant” for the British Crown, in large part thanks to Winston Churchill insisting that he only drank this champagne for decades. Translation: It’s really good stuff.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The champagne draws you in with this medley of bright wildflowers next to a brioche folded with stewed apple and a touch of vanilla and jasmine.
Palate: The palate revels in apricot jam, stewed plums, and more vanilla before a bright and slightly burnt orange oil arrives with hints of figs, anise, and beeswax candle wicks.
Finish: The end draws the perfect amount of fizzy buzz that’s almost heavy before drawing buttery brioche to a flutter of pain au chocolat.
Bottom Line:
This is getting into the complex and delicious wines. This also pulls off that magic trick of starting light, feeling brash and bold, and ending perfectly balanced between the two. It’s easy to see why the British royals pour this for their everyday champagne needs to this day.
Veuve Clicquot is a great starter champagne when you’re looking to take things up from novice to advanced beginner without getting too deep into the “advanced” stuff. Their Rose offering is made with 50 to 60 different crus that come from largely Pinot Noir grapes supported by Meunier and Chardonnay wines.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Berry tarts with buttery pastry and bright citrus oils pop on the nose next to a flourish of almond and lemon cookies dusted with powdered sugar and a whisper of oak spice.
Palate: Those berry tarts take on a rich strawberry note on the palate that’s fresh and vibrant before that butteriness returns with a moment of vanilla pods and old oak staves soaked in dry brandy.
Finish: A moment of orange oil drives the finish toward dry oak and butter vanilla with a hint of those bright berries lingering the longest.
Bottom Line:
Veuve is already a great choice to pop any ol’ time of year. The specialness of their rose varietal feels that little more dialed to NYE celebrations. Why? There’s more of that holiday dessert vibe with dark berries and lemon cookies with a hint of old oak and dark brandy. Add in the light bitterness and the whole thing feels like the perfect after-dinner sipper.
Moët is a very old-school champagne that goes back to the court of French royalty. The popularity of this wine cannot be understated. They’re one of the biggest producers of champagne in the world. Nectar Impérial is a special blend of reserve wines (old ones) chosen to add a deeper sense of richness and complexity to the bubbly.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The flute pulls you in with a sense of tropical fruits leaning towards mangos and pineapple while stonefruits lurk in the background.
Palate: Those stonefruits take over on the palate with apricots and meaty plums leading toward a white grape touch next to a hint of vanilla.
Finish: Finally, that vanilla takes on a slightly creamy edge (thanks to a touch of Chardonnay in the blend), bringing a well-rounded body to this sip.
Bottom Line:
Creamy vanilla sauce over a bowl of fresh winter fruits? Yes, please! While that does sound like a great after-dinner sipper too, this wine really shines any time of day with any meal, crowd, or vibe. It’s probably the most “for everyone” champers on the list.
Louis Roederer is one of the oldest Champagne houses that also happens to be one of the few fully independent shingles. The wine made a name as the champagne of the Russian Royal Court pre-revolution. As those royals ran for their lives, they spread the love of Louis Roederer to Paris, London, New York, and Shanghai, helping make the wine a truly international brand.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: There’s a real sense of an orchard full of stone fruits next to lightly roasted nuts with a hint of a warm croissant on the nose.
Palate: That butter and yeasty bready fades first as the ripe apricot and gooseberries counterpoint a deep dryness and light bubbles that are dry and full of that dry yeastiness.
Finish: There’s very little sweetness at play as a touch of oaky vanilla pops on the very end with a sense of dry oak, brandy, and apricot just kissed by dry honeycombs and apple peels.
Bottom Line:
This is a dry AF wine. That makes this one a little bit more of an acquired taste for some. The sweetness is drawn way back, allowing the wood and yeast to take center stage. We’d argue that makes this one a wonderful counterpoint for a big fatty meal as a slow sipper. But be warned, some champagne neophytes might not dig this one as much as the sweeter wines on the list.
Ruinart Blanc is a very specific champagne. It’s made from 100% Chardonnay grapes. The ripple here is that 25% of the blend is from reserve wines that have settled in oak for several years before batching. Those wines are primarily Premier Crus (premiere vineyards with the best terroir) from the Montagne de Reims and the Côte des Blancs regions.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: This nose bursts with a fresh fruit basket brimming with pears, sweet and tart apples, freshly plucked red berries, and a big ol’ pineapple in the middle before hints of summer wildflowers and fresh ginger sneak in.
Palate: The palate is lush with a sense of walnut fats and cardamom pods next to fresh peach tossed with pear brandy and orange zest with a whisper of sea salt.
Finish: The orange takes on a chinotto vibe on the finish as the spices kick in from the oak next to this lush sense of vanilla and butter at the very end.
Bottom Line:
This is a lovely and very bold pour. You’ll want to pour this as a counterpoint to charcuterie boards or as a dessert pour in place of pie and cake.
This is a premier cuvée (the first cut of wine from a batch) champagne that’s dialed in for 21st-century palates (thanks to partial ownership by Jay-Z). Beyond those facts, the winemakers keep their cards close to the chest with the details of what’s in the bottle.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Soft peach and fresh apricot pop on the nose and are countered by tart red berries and bright orange that’s part oily and part floral before a buttery and sweet brioche arrives.
Palate: Those red berries sweeten toward a brandied cherry on the front of the palate as lemon-kissed sugar cookies with a creamy honey sweetness drive the palate toward soft oakiness and a hint of dry cedar.
Finish: That dry cedar drives the finish toward a whisper of winter spice barks before the creamy honey and brandied cherries return on the end for a lush finish full of sharp bubbles.
Bottom Line:
This is good and very dry champagne. Given the bottle, this is kind of a show-off wine. But we cannot deny that the bubbly inside is legitimately tasty and has a great holiday vibe balance of dark fruit, winter spices, and fresh bubbles. If you’re serving a buffet of holiday treats — savory and sweet — for NYE this year, then this wine will pair with it all.
Perrier Jouët Belle Epoque is a vintage champagne. That means the absolute best wines (from the top-tier vineyards) from a specific year (2014 in this case) were left alone to mature until ready for release, creating a bit of a time machine to another era of wine-making in France.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: Summer wildflowers and white peaches fresh from the tree dominate the nose with a sense of sweet oakiness, soft and very fresh croissant (to the point of almost feeling warm from the oven), and this flutter of almond shell.
Palate: Fresh apple skins and pear stems drive the palate with a whisper of chinotto orange bitterness, soft lemon oils, and more of that nutshell dryness with a hint of soft oak that’s damn near creamy.
Finish: The creaminess amps on the finish as the wildflowers meld with creamed honey, soft stewed pear, and a whisper of winter spice barks.
Bottom Line:
Okay, now we’re into the unassailable amazing wines. This goes with everything wintry while also offering its own feel and depth that makes it singularly delicious as a sipper. You cannot go wrong pouring this wine for anyone from a newbie to a Master Sommelier.
Bollinger has spent centuries becoming the icon it is today. The wine got a huge boost when it became the champagne of Queen Victoria’s court in the late 1800s, which led to it being the official drink of Ian Fleming’s James Bond. Thanks to the guidance of Lily Bollinger post-WWII, the brand became the champagne that the adventurers, jet-setters, and champagne drinkers in the know drink.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: This draws you in with a sense of over-ripe peaches next to tart apples and sweet pears stewed with dark spices, sultanas, and buttery wine before hitting this layer of dry oak with a hint of old cedar flakes.
Palate: That spice and apple/pear bring about an almost apple butter feel as the svelte nature of the sip leads towards a brioche loaded with walnuts with subtle winter spice barks and dry yet sweet oakiness.
Finish: The end leans into the sweet creaminess of the orchard fruit with a vibrant sense of flaked sea salt and dashes of brandied raisins and saffron-stewed apricots.
Bottom Line:
This is the wine you pop when you’re about to kiss the one you love as the new year rings in. It’s perfection … just like that kiss should be.
Krug Grande Cuvée is one of the best pours of bubbly out there (and I’m saying that as a “die-on-a-hill” Bollinger acolyte). The wine is hewn from 120 different wines that are 10 different ages, ranging into the double digits. Naturally, the wines selected are from the best vines with impeccable terroir-driven winemaking at the core of each of them.
Tasting Notes:
Nose: The nose is akin to walking through a field of wildflowers with an orange and lemon orchard in full bloom in the near distance next to rich and very good marzipan cut with moist gingerbread houses covered in candied berries, cherries, and citrus rinds.
Palate: Chinotto orange bitterness opens the dry yet creamy palate with a sense of lemon curd and quince jelly before this deep almond oil sense arrives with a hint of petit pains au chocolat aux amandes (very buttery pastries with rich chocolate and almond paste) next to a touch of dried cranberry.
Finish: The end leans into the dried red fruit and almond paste with a nice dry orange bitterness accented by subtle oakiness that’s more like a walk through a wine cellar than holding an oak stave in your hand.
Bottom Line:
This is kind of a show-off wine too (that price is no joke). But where this wine excels is in the excellence of the actual champagne in the bottle. This is a fantastic wine from top to bottom and should be the only bottle in your guests’ hands as 2024 dawns — price be damned!
There technically was a new Childish Gambino/Donald Glover project this year: an EP tied to his TV show Swarm, on which Glover wrote two songs and performed on one of them. As far as pure Gambino albums, though, the latest is 2020’s 3.15.20. Now, it looks like a new project could be coming next year.
Is Childish Gambino releasing a new album in 2024?
A TMZ interviewer caught up with Glover outside the Greenwich Hotel in New York and asked what’s coming up next from him. He said an album is on the way, so the interviewer asked when, and he replied, “Soon.”
In an interview from this past October, Glover was asked about new Gambino music and he responded, “I feel like it’ll be clear sooner rather than later. It’d be better for people to just tune in, I suppose. But I’m trying harder to not be cryptic. Tyler [The Creator] is always, like, ‘You’re so cryptic.’ But I’m like, ‘I’m really not.’ I just like suspense, I guess. I think it makes stuff better. But that’s just me.”
In a red-carpet interview from January, he also said, “I’m making music right now, I love it. I’m actually working, I’m in the studio. I’ve been bringing people in, like secret people, working on little things. But I just been, you know, making it for fun right now. But soon something will happen, I promise. Something will happen.”
So, is a new Gambino album coming in 2024? Well, he said “soon,” but he also said “soon” in January and that was nearly a year ago now. So, ultimately, time will tell.
The most interesting storytelling happening on screen in 2023 came via documentaries. These real-life narratives ran the gamut, from bittersweet love stories to extreme sports disasters, harrowing tales of war, and bone-chilling cult dispatches, but they all had one thing in common: they fascinated and informed us in equal measure. Sure, there are still a few true-crime entries padding out our “Best Of” list below, but this year also gave us an eclectic mix of films and series that expanded our ideas of what documentary filmmaking can do.
Here are the most interesting docs we watch in 2023.
American Symphony (Netflix)
On the same day that artist and Oscar winner Jon Batiste learned he had been nominated for 11 Grammy Awards, his partner, author Suleika Jaouad got a devastating diagnosis — her cancer was back. That’s where director Matthew Heineman’s emotionally charged documentary begins, in the midst of a pendulum swing between joy and heartbreak as Batiste preps a first-of-its-kind symphony for Carnegie Hall and Jaouad confronts a deadly disease she first battled a decade earlier. Both are determined to channel their triumphs and frustrations through their art, painfully peeling back a veneer of privacy to create what may be their greatest joint effort: a raw, earnest look at life and the many beautiful ways we survive it.
Still (Apple TV+)
Needle drops and re-creations help tell the story of the time Back to The Future star Michael J. Fox was the most famous actor in the world, lending a bit of fist-pumping energy to this Davis Guggenheim-directed documentary. But the true heart shines through in Fox’s conversations about his Parkinson’s diagnosis, his family, finding the ability to be present in his life, and the toughness that has allowed him to keep fighting and become a force in philanthropy. We’ve known Fox as an inspiration for the longest time, but with Still we’re reminded of the man at the center of his story – his ambitions, gifts, sacrifices, and the people and lessons that have shaped him.
The Deepest Breath (Netflix)
Halfway through Laura McGann’s Netflix documentary about the doomed love story of a pair of freedivers, you might find yourself mimicking Alessia Zecchini, holding your breath in concert as she descends to watery depths no regular human could withstand. As you exhale, gasping for air, Zecchini forges on, following a thin cable, miles below the surface as darkness swallows her and her lungs are pressurized to near combustion. McGann’s film treads a narrative line as precarious as the metal rope that tethers Zecchini to the surface, teetering between celebrating the woman’s impressive achievements and telling a cautionary tale about obsession, love, and the very human desire to push our bodies past what they can go.
20 Days in Mariupol (Amazon Prime Video)
“I want to live in Ukraine in peace and quiet” says a man clearing debris early on in 20 Days In Mariupol, a documentary showing the destructive and vicious effects of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on people simply trying to go about their lives. An intensely difficult and upsetting watch that will make you want to look away often, 20 Days In Mariupol is nevertheless 2023’s most powerful documentary and an invaluable historical document.
Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God (Max)
Hannah Olson’s provocative three-part docuseries opens like a found-footage horror movie. Police cam footage takes on a tour of a dilapidated home filled with half-washed children and jugs of colloidal silver before happening upon the mummified corpse of Amy Carlson, a former McDonald’s-manager-turned-cult-leader who proclaimed herself Mother God. Olson’s story works backward from there, charting Carlson’s shockingly normal childhood, her conspiracy theorist conversion via New Age forums online, and her self-aggrandizing ascent to absolute power over her wayward followers who believed her to be a 19 billion-year-old being, a reincarnation of famous historical figures like Joan of Arc and Marilyn Monroe, and humanity’s true savior. Of course, Carlson was none of those things, but Olson’s ability to earn the trust of her flock who rewarded her with revealing sit-down interviews and unfettered home video access to the group’s inner workings made what Mother God really was — a con artist who took things too far — even more interesting.
Murder In Boston (Max)
A shocking, grisly murder and a strange cover-up are just the beginning of this harrowing tale about a city on the brink. In 1989, Charles Stuart frantically dialed 9-1-1, claiming both he and his pregnant wife had been shot by a Black assailant in a tracksuit. Her death sparked a citywide manhunt that unearthed decades of racial tension and police brutality in Boston, causing a fallout that reverberates to this day. The Last Dance director Jason Hehir deftly manages all of the political and social threads woven through this murder mystery, effectively showing how an unremarkable tragedy leveled an entire city and destroyed a Black community.
Pamela: A Love Story (Netflix)
Pamela Anderson was a global sensation and sex symbol who met the negative side of fame with the release of a private sex tape from her honeymoon and the sexist, sneering jokes made at her expense in the aftermath. More than two decades later, we all got a reminder of that era with Pam & Tommy, a dramatization of Anderson’s life. But that wasn’t the whole story. How could it be when she wasn’t involved in telling it? That’s the setup for Pamela: A Love Story, but the doc does so much more than just explore that time in Anderson’s life, tracking her origins and what she’s been doing in the years since to paint a portrait of a complex and powerful icon, unlucky in love and, often in her career, yet undaunted in her efforts to live on her own terms.
Albert Brooks: Defending My Life (Max)
A treasure chest of late-night bits and revolutionarily smart films is propped open long enough for some of the funniest people in the world to lavish praise on Albert Brooks, a master comic mind whose work as a filmmaker has been obscured by time. What’s better, Brooks lends his perspective to his life and career in conversation with his longtime friend and fellow genius filmmaker Rob Reiner. This could have been three times as long and we would have been deliriously happy to mine the depths of this fascinating career and movies like Real Life, Modern Romance, Lost In America, Defending Your Life, and Mother, that beg exploration and appreciation.
We Kill For Love
This look at the direct-to-video and late-night cable (Skinimax) era of erotic thrillers is a tad overlong, at times seeming encyclopedic in its reminiscence and name checks for what feels like every film in the genre from the late ‘80s to early 2000s. But what feels like a nostalgia trip turns into a concise and fascinating autopsy on a business model smothered to death by the death of the video store, the rise of the internet, and demands for more volume and less art.
Savior Complex (Max)
This three-part docuseries from HBO skewers the white savior complex that fuels Christian missionary work by laying bare its worst, sometimes fatal, flaws. Renee Bach is the case study here, a young woman intent on doing good in a third-world country who overestimates her abilities to the detriment of the deathly ill children and desperate mothers who turn to her for help. Bach’s shelter for malnourished babies and young kids became a pedestal that propped up her self-mythology and though this doc does take some time to break down the racial tensions that exist in Africa thanks to American missionaries using the continent as a conversion experiment, the most interesting takeaways come from Bach’s account of her experience there. How did a woman with no medical training direct doctors and nurses on treating starved kids? And how did she escape the consequences when those treatments turned fatal? The answer is both enraging and completely unsurprising.
The holidays are when we get together with family, which can be joyous, triggering, or a combination of both, depending on who you’re related to. Therapist and TikToker Dr. Angelica Shiels says that after the holidays, her clients’ most common “hurt feeling” is from passive-aggressive and critical comments from relatives.
The pain stems from the disappointment people feel when trying to spread holiday cheer and are met with “negativity and criticism instead of positivity and enthusiasm” in return.
Dr. Shiels shared some examples of these comments in a video with over 1.3 million views. One examples is when someone is sharing their plants and is confronted with unexpected negativity. “Oh, you have a lot of plants in your house. Do you really need more plants?” Dr. Shiels says.
“When someone is trying to share something about their life, like applying to a new job, someone being negative, like, ‘Why would you want to work for Amazon? Don’t you know that they’re ruining the economy?'” she continued.
“Or if someone’s talking about painting their kitchen cabinets and someone says, I heard painting the face of the cabinets reduces the value of the house,” Dr. Shiels said.
#anxiety #criticism, and #catastrophizing lead to #negativity and damage #relationships. #family #holidays #therapy #couples #marriage #friends #parenting
According to Dr. Shiels, these negative or passive-aggressive comments are often honest responses that reveal your family member’s anxieties. Your aunt may be upset about how Amazon has affected the economy, and your brother-in-law probably believes you have too many plants.
The problem is that they took the wrong opportunity to share their thoughts with you and need to learn when it’s appropriate to be critical.
“Unless you ask first — oh, do you want my opinion on this? — It’s not helping,” Dr. Shiels said, adding that “it’s assuaging your own anxiety at the expense of your connection and relationship with others.”
When you start listing the kinds of animals people keep as pets, “octopus” may not even make the list. But some people do try to keep the smart cephalopods as pets, and some pet stores do sell them.
YouTube science and engineering educator Mark Rober found this out first hand when he procured his pet octopus, Sashimi, from a pet store. After some research, he found out that octopuses (yes, “octopuses” is just as acceptable as “octopi”) are not bred in captivity, which means Sashimi was taken from the ocean. As he says, he was “hit with the startling realization” that he had unintentionally become “the bad guy from Finding Nemo.“
To make things right again, Rober found out from the pet store exactly where Sashimi had come from and set out to determine whether she would be able to go back home and live in the ocean again after becoming accustomed to being hand-fed at the pet store. Returning her to the wild wouldn’t exactly be thoughtful or kind if she couldn’t feed herself, so Rober constructed a maze for Sashimi with some delicious shrimp—her favorite food—at the end to see if she could figure out how to get to them.
“The idea was that if she could figure out and remember how to solve an obstacle course maze, then I would be assured that she could figure out and remember her early days hunting in the ocean and we could send her back home with confidence,” shared Rober.
So in classic Mark Rober fashion, he constructed a complex underwater maze for Sashimi to navigate. And as he explained how she figured out each obstacle in the course, he also shared some fascinating facts about octopuses, such as:
– Their ability to color and shape-shift is unmatched in the animal world, with the ability to mimic larger, more predatory animals
– Their blood is blue because it’s cooper-based, which is more efficient in cold water environments.
– If they lose an arm, they can regrow it completely, and you won’t be able to tell it’s any different than the original.
– Octopuses are the closest thing we have to intelligent alien life on Earth, in that octopus intelligence evolved independently of the vertebrate creatures we associate with animal intelligence.
– They have twice the number of neurons as a cat, but only a third of them are in their brain. The other 2/3 are in their arms, giving them the ability not just to taste and smell but also to think and act with their arms, independently of their brain.
Rober’s ability to educate and entertain at the same time without overdoing either one is part of why he has nearly 30 million followers on YouTube. But his willingness to drive 8 hours to return Sashimi to her home so she could live out the rest of her short life in the wild is part of it, too. It’s one thing to study an octopus in a maze simply for the fun of it; it’s another to know it’s being done in service to the animal itself.
Well done, Sashimi. We hope you find plenty of shrimp to nosh on now that you’re home once again.
You’re in the store, trying to gather the last of your items and head to the checkout counter before your toddler really starts losing it. You can see the meltdown coming—maybe you forgot snacks or it’s too close to nap time or your wee one is just feeling particularly prickly for no apparent reason—but there’s not much you can do other than hope you can get out of the store before the tornado hits.
But then it hits. Your child is wailing, you’re already at the checkout, people are staring (while pretending not to stare) and you wish you could just curl up in a ball and disappear.
It’s hard to describe the stress and anxiety of trying to manage a toddler in a tantrum while also trying to get through the checkout lane, but it’s real. Most moms have been there and know the helpless feeling, which is what makes the simple act of a Dollar Tree employee all the more wonderful.
Mom and Instagram user @maremare711 shared the video showing Fatimah, a Dollar Tree clerk, holding her daughter and letting her help scan her items.
“This ANGEL at the Dollar Tree in West Orange, NJ scooped my daughter up in the midst of an UPPY meltdown,” the mom wrote. “She saw my hands were full while we were checking out and my patience was THIN.”
“There is nothing more anxiety inducing than a check out line and a screaming toddler,” she continued. “She instantly changed our moods for the better. Mare got to feel special. And I got to experience this total act of kindness.”
She also shared that that Dollar Tree location was closing and that Fatimah was hoping for a good transfer.
“I never post stuff like this but I just want this woman to have the world!” the mom concluded.
People in the comments were clear about what they thought of Fatimah’s kindness.
“People like this make the world so much easier for us moms. Motherhood can feel so lonely and isolating— everyone needs to take note of this lovely worker!! Once I had a Panera worker comfort my screaming toddler and help me walk him to the car. Literally changed the whole trajectory of our day!” shared one mom.
“Gosh, people don’t realize how much moments like this mean the absolute world to us moms out here with littles” wrote another. “When so many feel annoyed by a child’s mere existence, it’s so refreshing to see beautiful acts of kindness, understanding, and patience like this towards our babies. ❤️❤️❤️”
“Hoping this goes viral and this woman get offered a great job where her kindness is valued,” shared another commenter.
“If Dollar Tree doesn’t promote her immediately we riot,” one person quipped, to which dozens of people responded with variations of “Tell us where and when and we’ll show up.”
Dollar Tree did see the original video on Instagram and commented, “Thank you for sharing this sweet experience! Go Fatimah! Way to go above and beyond. 💚 We’ll be sure to share this with field leadership so they’re aware of the Fatimah’s hard work and amazing spirit.”
People like Fatimah truly make a difference in the world, seeing someone’s struggle and immediately taking action to try to alleviate it. Many people might want to help in a situation like this but feel awkward about it, like they might be overstepping or something, but this is a good example that when the intention is sincere and there’s something we know we can do, it’s best to at least try.
Thanks for the heartwarming boost of faith in humanity, Fatimah.
It is very easy to bet on things that are not sports. Think about all the times where you and a friend made an innocuous bet on, like, how many hot dogs you can eat over the course of an entire baseball game or something. Heck, there’s lots of money that moves around every single year based on how long it takes for the person to sing the national anthem at the Super Bowl.
As it turns out, Shaquille O’Neal is the kind of person who likes to bet on things other than sports. As he explained on a recent episode of The Big Podcast, Shaq told the story about how he used to watch one particular television show and throw down large sums of money on, well, if you’ve seen an episode of Maury you can probably guess where this is going.
“Every morning at 10 a.m., we’d wake up with thousands of dollars and we’d watch The Maury Povich Show,” Shaq said. “And we’d make bets on who the father is … Every day. So, like, we watch it, we let them talk, and then we pause and then we pull that money out. ‘I’ll bet you a thousand he’s not the father!’ So, that was my thing.”
There is no thing I want more than for the next episode of Inside the NBA going off the rails at, like, 1:28 a.m. EST because Charles Barkley cannot stop asking Shaq about this.
“I have two of them, because at one point I had lost one,” Monét said, “and I was so devastated because I’m sometimes a bit irresponsible. That was the old me, this is the new me, but Ariana felt so bad she got another one.”
But after Monét was gifted the other ring, she made another surprising discovery.
“Then I found the other one,” Monét said. “So she’s like, ‘Just keep both,’ so I have two, and I wear them stacked.”
Considering the fact that Monét has given Grande some of her biggest hits, these rings are certainly well-deserved.
Lil Nas X continues to tease his upcoming second album. Over the past month, the “That’s What I Want” hitmaker has taken to social media, sharing that he’s in his “Christian era,” but that won’t stop him from enjoying — um, certain activities. Earlier in the week, Lil Nas X launched a parody website teasing the album, modeled after those of Christian conspiracy theorists.
Today (December 27), Lil Nas X shared a more direct update on his impending new era, hinting that an upcoming music video from his album will have a personal touch to it.
“I wrote AND directed my own music video for the first time,” he tweeted, “excited for y’all to see. it’s the best one yet!”
wrote AND directed my own music video for the first time. excited for y’all to see. it’s the best one yet!
The singer/rapper has remained fairly mum about the album. But earlier this year, Lil Nas X teased the album in an interview with Vogue, noting that he is changing up a lot of things — including his sound, his wardrobe, and his aesthetic.
“I’m working steady,” he said. “I’m in this next phase of figuring out who this next person is for me. I’m not going out in the same clothes as my last era, or the one before that. I’m figuring that out, and learning to trust my own instincts.”
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