News

From heartfelt 19th-century letters to Swiftie bracelets, a UC Berkeley American studies course looks at the ways we’ve found connection with each other throughout history and examines the role of ...
Nine-in-ten U.S. teens say they use YouTube. Majorities also use TikTok (63%), Instagram (61%) and Snapchat (55%).
Longtime Red Bull team principal Christian Horner has been fired after a 20-year stint that included eight Formula 1 drivers’ ...
The Supreme Court has cleared the way for President Donald Trump’s plans to downsize the federal workforce despite warnings from experts that vital government services will be lost and hundreds of tho ...
Ted Cruz defends Greece vacation timing as Texas floods kill over 100. Senator faced criticism for overseas trip during ...
Every design choice that social media platforms make nudges users toward certain actions, values and emotional states.
A new project by the History Channel explores the triumphs and injustices of Jim Thorpe’s career. “He’s one of the greatest ...
Before there were influencers, viral videos, and billion-view platforms, there was something raw, real, and radically democratic: public access television. Born in the 1970s, public access TV was one ...
While the number of people in attendance was the largest single gathering in Oklahoma City history, there was some debate online over whether the crowd size was impressive. Here's what we know. How ...
The 2025 national championship is headed back to Baton Rouge as LSU baseball held on late to defeat Coastal Carolina 5-3 in game two of the College World Series finals. The Tigers went undefeated in ...
Yotam Ophir's book looks at the history, psychology, social impact and possible solutions for an issue that has been around almost as long as peple have been communicating.
The internet might seem like a convenient culprit driving recent attention and concerns about misinformation, but pointing fingers exclusively at the digital age is narrow and limiting.